294 60 13MB
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SLAVISTIC P R I N T I N G S AND R E P R I N T I N G S
277
SLAVIC FORUM ESSAYS IN LINGUISTICS AND LITERATURE
edited by M I C H A E L S. F L I E R
1974 MOUTON THE HAGUE • PARIS
© Copyright 1974 in the Netherlands. Mouton & Co. N. V., Publishers, The Hague No part of this book may be translated or reproduced in any form, by print, photoprint, microfilm, or any other means, without written permission from the publishers
L I B R A R Y O F CONGRESS CATALOG CARD N U M B E R : 72-88178
Printed in Hungary
TO MY FATHER AND MOTHER
PREFACE
I n 1970 the third annual West Coast Summer Program in Slavic and East European Studies was held at UCLA under the auspices of the Department of Slavic Languages, the UCLA Office of Summer Sessions, and the United States Office of Education (under grant no. OEC 0-70-2603). In addition to intensive language courses in Russian, Czech, SerboCroatian, Bulgarian, Estonian, Hungarian, and Romanian, the Summer Program offered numerous area courses in Slavic linguistics, Russian literature and history taught by a distinguished faculty from across the nation, e.g. Alexander V. IsaCenko (UCLA): "Russian Lexicology", "Seminar in Aspect and Tense in Russian"; Hans Rogger (UCLA): "Russian Intellectual History", "History of Russia 1796-1917"; George Y. Shevelov (Columbia University): "Introduction to the History and Structure of Ukrainian and Belorussian", "Selected Problems in Comparative Slavic Linguistics"; Kiril Taranovsky (Harvard University): "Russian Poetics", "Seminar in Russian Metrics and Versification"; Robert H. Whitman (University of California, Berkeley): "Generative Russian Syntax"; Dean S. Worth (UCLA): "Russian Derivational Morphology"; Gerta H. Worth (UCLA): "Introduction to the History of the Russian Literary Language". The complete list of staff and curriculum is given below. During the eight-week session distinguished scholars in the field of Slavic languages and literatures were invited to offer formal presentations weekly in the Slavic Forum Lecture Series on current problems in their own research. With two exceptions 1 the essays in this volume represent the written versions of those presentations except for changes introduced by the authors as a result of the 1
Professors Isadenko and Shevelov delivered lectures which were committed for publication elsewhere.
8
PREFACE
discussions following each lecture. For thematic continuity the linguistic and literary studies have been grouped together. As Director of the Summer Program I wish to express my gratitude to the Forum Lecture participants, the faculty, and the administrative staff for making the summer a profitable and rewarding one for all. MICHAEL S .
FLIER
Los Angeles November, 1970
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface 1970 West Coast Summer Program in Slavic and Eaet European Studies Slavic Forum Lecture Series—1970 A note on transliteration
7 11 12 13
PART ONE: LINGUISTICS
Morris Halle Remarks on Slavic accentology Alexander V. Isacenko On have and be languages: A typological sketch Theodore M. Lightner A problem in the analysis of some vowel ~ zero alternations in Modern Russian
17 43
78
PART TWO: LITERATURE
Victor Erlich The writer as witness: The achievement of Alexander Solzhenitsyn 91 Donald Fanger The Gogol problem: Perspectives from absence 103 Hugh McLean Cathedral Folk: Apotheosis of Orthodoxy or its Doomsday Book? 130 Kiril Taranovsky The problem of context and subtext in the poetry of Osip Mandel'§tam 149
1970 WEST COAST SUMMER PROGRAM IN SLAVIC AND EAST EUROPEAN STUDIES
Elementary Russian Intermediate Russian Advanced Russian Russian Composition Elementary Elementary Elementary Elementary Elementary Elementary
Czech Bulgarian Serbocroatian Estonian Hungarian Romanian
Russian Intellectual History Russian History 1796-1917 Structure of Macedonian Russian Literature: Nineteenth Century Tolstoy Introduction to the History of the Russian Literary Language Russian Derivational Morphology . Generative Russian Syntax Russian Lexicology Russian Poetics Introduction to the Structure and History of Ukrainian and Belorussian Selected Problems in Comparative Slavic Linguistics Intensive Old Church Slavic Seminar in Aspect and Tense in Russian Seminar in Russian Metrics and Versification
P. Hodgson (UCLA) P. Hodgson (UCLA) G. Worth (UCLA), M. Gisetti (UCLA) D. Worth (UCLA), N. Pavlova (USC) Z. Meyerstein (UCLA) I. Talev (UCLA) A. Albin (UCLA) E. Vihman (Berkeley) K. Keresztes (American University) D. Grigorescu (University of Bucharest) H. Rogger (UCLA) H. Rogger (UCLA) A. Albin (UCLA) M. Curran (University of Illinois) M. Curran (University of Illinois) G. Worth (UCLA) D. Worth (UCLA) R. Whitman (Berkeley) A. Isa6enko (UCLA) K. Taranovsky (Harvard University) G. Shevelov (Columbia University) G. Shevelov (Columbia University) M. Flier (UCLA) A. Isacenko (UCLA) K. Taranovsky (Harvard University)
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SLAVIC FORUM L E C T U R E S E R I E S
—1970
ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF Administrative Assistants for t h e D e p a r t m e n t of Slavic Languages, UCLA Administrative Assistant for t h e Russian and E a s t European Studies Center, UCLA
Mary Pottala, J u d y Shulman
Lucille Liets
SLAVIC FORUM LECTURE SERIES - 1970 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, LOS ANGELES
23 J u l y
30 J u l y 6 August 13 August
20 August
27 August 3 September
8 September
Alexander V. Isadenko (UCLA) "The jer shift in E a s t Slavic: A new morphophonemic approach" Theodore M. Lightner (University of Texas) " A synchronic t r e a t m e n t o f f e r s in modern R u s s i a n " Donald Fanger (Harvard University) " T h e Gogol problem: Perspectives f r o m absence" George Y. Shevelov (Columbia University) " T h e phonological development of Common Slavic f r o m a typological point of view" Hugh McLean (University of California, Berkeley) "Soborjane: Apotheosis of Orthodoxy or its Doomsday Book?" Morris Halle (Massachusetts I n s t i t u t e of Technology) " R e m a r k s on Slavic accentology" Victor Erlich (Yale University) " T h e writer as witness: The achievement of Alexander Solzhenitsyn" Kiril Taranovsky (Harvard University) " T h e problem of context and subtext in t h e p o e t r y of Osip Mandel'stam"
A NOTE ON TRANSLITERATION
With the exception of certain proper names I have adhered to the international (continental) system of transliterating Cyrillic into Latin letters, e.g. q = c, lit = a, q = c, b = ', T> = ". I have used traditional English spellings of names which have achieved wide circulation: Chekhov instead of Cexov, Pushkin instead of Puskin, Solzhenitsyn instead of Solzenicyn, but Mandel'stam, Vjazemskij, Axmatova. M. S. F.
PAET ONE
LINGUISTICS
REMARKS ON SLAVIC ACCENTOLOGY*
MORRIS HALLE
0. This study of Slavic accentuation has been guided by two considerations that might be termed theoretical in the sense that they do not derive directly from the facts, but are rather ideas concerning the nature and organization of the data arrived at independently of the particular facts to be considered here. The strong empiricist strain dominant in much of modern linguistics has taught us to be rather skeptical about the value of such theoretical considerations. It is widely felt that theory should be closely linked to the facts, and any departure from "a close hugging of the phonetic ground" is regarded by many linguists as the surest road to disaster. This view seems to me quite mistaken. Theory must be more than a more or less elegant summary of the facts known to the theorist. It is only when theory makes claims about facts which are unfamiliar or totally unknown that theory exercises its true function in science, which is that of a tool for the discovery of facts. To illustrate this function of a theory is one of the aims of this paper. Its success or failure, therefore, is to be judged by the extent to which it succeeds or fails to deepen our understanding of the accentology of Slavic languages, which because of its complexity and intricacy has occupied the attention of linguists for a century or more. The first of the theoretical considerations that play an important role in the present investigation was proposed by Nancy Woo in her dissertation (1969). She argued that "dynamic" tones such as "rising", "falling", or "fall-rise" were not to be included in the universal set of distinctive features; instead whenever phoneticians observed in a language such "dynamic" tones, these had to be * This work was supported in part by National Institute of Mental Health grant MH - 13390 - 04. In preparing this paper I have received help from Wayles Brown and Horace Lunt, for which I am most grateful. This article is reprinted from Linguistic Inquiry 2, 1 (1971) by permission of the MIT Press.
18
MORRIS HALLE
explained as surface manifestations of underlying representations in which only "stationary" tones figure. Thus, for instance, Woo showed that in Northern Tepehuan "falling" and "rising" tones are always surface manifestations of sequences of two vowels, one having a "high" tone and the second, the neutral "nonhigh" tone. When the "high" toned vowel is first in the sequence, we observe "falling" tone; when it is second, we observe "rising" tone. It is, of course, always possible to represent "falling" and "rising" tones in this fashion. The fact that makes Woo's suggestion interesting is that when the "dynamic" tones are so represented the phonological description of Northern Tepehuan is significantly improved. Woo has shown that a similar situation prevails in a number of widely divergent languages, that when "dynamic" tones are treated as purely surface phenomena, not only is there no loss of generalization in the phonological description of the language; instead the description can be deepened. These results are obviously of the greatest interest but they fall short of conclusively establishing Woo's hypothesis concerning the nature of prosodic features, so that further empirical testing of the hypothesis is clearly indicated. The prosodic phenomena of the Slavic languages constitute a good testing ground for Woo's hypothesis, and as will be shown below, provide independent support for the hypothesis in a manner quite different from that of the languages discussed by Woo. The second theoretical idea that has guided this work was originally advanced by Roman Jakobson in his report to the International Congress of Slavists held at Sofia (1963), and in his contribution to the volume of studies in honor of J. Kurylowicz (1965). In its grossest terms the idea is that underlying all Slavic prosodic phenomena is a pitch contour of the word that is much like that of a "terrace tone" language such as Japanese. In Japanese the word is divided into two parts, an initial high pitched portion, and a final low (or neutral) pitched portion (the latter may be lacking). In order to specify the pitch contour of a word, it is, therefore, necessary only to indicate the vowel after which the low pitched portion of the word begins. This initial marking of the Japanese word is provided by the morphological component of the grammar, for it depends on the morphemic composition of the word. The prosodic contour of the word is established by special phonological rules which characteristically differ from dialect to dialect but always take as their input the word with the specially marked vowel as
REMARKS ON SLAVIC ACCENTOLOGY
19
provided by the morphology. The phonological rules thus complete the specification of the pitch contour of the word. What is especially important here is that the phonetic output is the product of two distinct components, the morphological rules that determine the initial marking of the word, and the phonological rules that derive the phonetic output from forms first operated on by the morphological component. I shall try to show in the discussion that follows that an analogous situation prevails in Slavic; i.e. the prosodic contour of words is determined by the interaction of the two independent components, the morphology and phonology of the particular language. I believe that much of the confusion that permeates Slavic accentological studies is due to a failure to see that two totally distinct components — and hence distinct types of process — are involved. 1. We begin by considering what is perhaps the simplest case, the stress system of modern Russian. We examine the stress contour of the inf. and 2nd sg. present forms v,irt,et,
v,ert,i§
'turn'
where the stressed vowels are represented in bold face. We shall assume that underlying these forms we have the strings v,ert,-\-e-{-t,
v,ert,-\-e-\-i-\-S
We postulate, moreover, the following rules: (1)
H ASSIGNMENT, which places a diacritic feature [ + H ] on some vowel in the word. (Note that there are words that do not receive [ + H ] on any vowel.) This rule is part of the morphology. H DISTRIBUTION, which places the diacritic feature [ + H ] on all vowels preceding (to the left of) the vowel marked [ + H ] by the H ASSIGNMENT rule. VOWEL TRUNCATION, which deletes a vowel followed by a vowel (cf. Jakobson 1948). STRESS ASSIGNMENT, which places stress on the last (rightmost) vowel marked [ + H ] ; or, if there is no such vowel, on the first vowel in the word. NEUTRALIZATION rules, which assign [—H] to all unstressed
20
MORRIS HALLE
vowels, and convert unstressed [o, a, e] —»- [i] after "soft" consonants (ikanje), and —>- [e] elsewhere (akanje). Given these five rules we derive the correct stress contours from underlying representations as shown: v,ert,-\-e-\-t,
v,ert,-\-e-\-i-\-8
+ H -f-H
-f-H + H 0
E
E
i v,irt,et,
H
ASSIGNMENT
H
DISTRIBUTION
VOWEL TRUNCATION STRESS ASSIGNMENT NEUTRALIZATION
v,ert,i§
What is important about these derivations is that they capture quite naturally the feature that is at the heart of many Slavic accentual phenomena, i.e. when a potentially stressed vowel is deleted the stress moves towards the front of the word. I t is essential to observe that there is no logical reason that this should be the case. I t is equally plausible to suppose that when a potentially stressed vowel is deleted the stress moves towards the end of the word, or that the word becomes stressless. I t is, therefore, a significant, though perhaps small point in favor of the proposed system of rules that of the three possible alternatives just discussed the rules pick the one that is empirically correct. The same movement of stress towards the beginning of the word can be observed in forms with a zero desinence. In treating such forms I assume (following Lightner) that in underlying representations of modern Russian there are two reduced vowels, ~b, b (the socalled Jers) x which either appear on the surface as [o, e] respectively, or are deleted. To account for these facts we shall postulate the two rules: JER DELETION, which deletes jers word-finally, or if followed by a full vowel in the next syllable. JER LOWERING, which turns all jers remaining after JER DELETION has applied into [o, e].
W e leave here unresolved the question as to the phonetic nature of the sounds represented by the symbols T>, h.
1
21
REMARKS ON SLAVIC ACCENTOLOGY
We shall assume that JER DELETION and JER LOWERING apply after the VOWEL DELETION rule but before the STRESS ASSIGNMENT and NEUTRALIZATION rules. Given these rules we can now show the way in which they operate in the derivation of the stress contours of such words as: (2)
stol
stala
'table'
( n o m . sg. +
zajom
zajma
'loan'
( n o m . Bg. +
g e n . sg.)
kiSka
kisok
'intestine'
(nom. sg. +
gen. pi.)
8tol-\-t> stol-\-a + H
+H
zajbm-\-b
+ H
+H
+ H
kisbk-\-a
+ H
+H
+H
o
o
a
-H stala
o
0
+H+H
0
zajma
kiska
H
ASSIGNMENT
H DISTRIBUTION VOWEL
TRUNCATION
JER DELETION
o a
-H
+ H
+H+H
0
a
-H zajom
kiibk-\-b
+ H
n o t applicable
0
stol
zajbm-\-a
g e n . sg.)
o
-H
JER LOWERING STRESS PLACEMENT NEUTRALIZATION
kisok
As noted above the actual placement of stress is determined by two separate factors: on the one hand, there are the phonological rules and, on the other hand, there are special morphological or readjustment rules — here represented by the H ASSIGNMENT rule — which assign the feature [ + H ] in the first place. In a way this division into two components is implicit in the traditional historical treatment of the problem, except that instead of assigning the feature [-f H ] which we shall identify as the equivalent of the phonetic feature HIGH PITCH, the traditional historical treatment postulated that special intonations were assigned by these rules: when the stress was on the stem as in the case of zajom, it was said that the stem had ACUTE intonation; when it was on the desinence as in the word kiSka, it was said to be OXYTONE, and when the word would h,ave remained without [ + H ] by our rules, the traditional description said that it had CIRCUMFLEX intonation on the first syllable.2 Sound laws (among them the much debated Law of Saussure-Fortunatov) as well as analogy were then adduced to account for the present day state of affairs in the individual languages. In contrast to the traditional view I would regard the various classes of stems as being distinguished from one another not by means of a phonetic mark, but rather by means of a special morphoWe shall have something to say about the fourth class of words, the socalled neoacute, in the discussion below.
2
22
MORRIS HALLE
logical classifier, similar perhaps to the marker that tells us that in Latin campus belongs to the fourth declension, whereas amicus belongs to the second declension. I take it that such markers are utilized by the H ASSIGNMENT rule to determine which vowel (if any) is to be marked [ + H ] . In a study of the accentual pattern of the Russian nominal declension (Halle 1970) I suggested that Russian noun stems basically are categorized into four classes depending on whether or not they require desinential stress in the singular, the plural, in neither number, or in both numbers. In addition, there is a small number of nouns that require further subcategorization. Whether this type of classification can be shown to hold for the accentual patterns observed in other types of words as well, is at present an open question which in my opinion is both of utmost difficulty and importance. I hope to devote to it a major investigation in the not too distant future. 3 2. The set of rules that has been developed above can handle the prosodic contours of words in Slavic languages other than Russian with only minor modifications. Consider first Standard Serbo-Croatian, Stokavian. As is well known this dialect has four types of accented vowel: short rising ', long rising short falling long falling The rising and falling tones do not occur freely in all positions in the word, as shown in Table 1 below (adapted from Ivi6 1958): TABLE 1 Monosyllabic words Falling Rising 3
Yes No
Polysyllabic words Initially Yes Yes
Finally
Medially
No No
No Yes
While this paper was in press I have had the opportunity to read the interesting dissertation of Herbert S. Coats (1970), which has shown me that the scheme proposed in Halle (1970) is in need of some revision. In particular Coats' study has made clear for me the absolutely pivotal position that is occupied in Russian phonology by a M E T A T O N Y rule very similar to the identically named rule (22) of Slovenian discussed below. It is this rule rather than the H A S S I G N M E N T which is responsible for the stem stress in plural forms of nouns with desinential stress in the sg. such as cislo 'number', vereteno 'spindle', beda 'sorrow', sirota 'orphan'. This result must be incorporated into any future study.
REMARKS ON SLAVIC ACCENTOLOGY
23
These facts can be readily accounted for if we make two assumptions. First, we assume that Standard Stokavian had a system of stress rules much like Russian, except t h a t the STRESS ASSIGNMENT rule locates the stress not on the last vowel with [ + H ] , but rather on the penultimate vowel with [ + H ] , if possible. I n cases where only the first vowe. in the word has [ + H ] , this vowel receives the stress; and when no vowel has [ + H ] the first syllable in the word (including here the preposition, if any) is stressed. Second, we propose t h a t the term "rising tone" in the traditional literature refers to a stressed vowel which is FOLLOWED I N THE SAME WORD BY A VOWEL WITH [ + H ] , whereas all other stressed vowels are said to have "falling" tone. Phonetically this makes good sense for we have assumed that [ + H ] represents the tonal feature [High pitch], and, in fact, Ivic and Lehiste have shown in their detailed acoustic investigations of Standard Stokavian tones (1963) t h a t "while the distinction between the two long accents might conceivably be based on information in the accented syllables themselves, in the case of the two short accents this information is decidedly insufficient. The feature which was constantly present and appeared to carry the main burden of distinction was the relationship between the stressed and the post-tonic syllable. In the case of both the short and the long falling accents, the post-tonic syllable had a low fundamental frequency (or there was no post-tonic syllable in the same word — M. H.); in the case of both rising accents, the post-tonic syllable had a fundamental frequency t h a t was either the same or higher than t h a t of the preceding syllable" (p. 132). Returning now to the facts represented in Table 1 we see t h a t these are readily accounted for in terms of the Standard Stokavian stress rule and the interpretative convention proposed above. Since "rising" tone is the tone of a stressed vowel followed in the same word by a vowel with [ + H ] , it follows immediately t h a t "rising" tone cannot be found on the last syllable of polysyllabic words or on monosyllabic words, but can, of course, be found elsewhere. Since the stress in polysyllabic words is placed on the penultimate vowel with [+11], if possible, we shall have "rising" tone in polysyllabic words in all cases except when the H ASSIGNMENT rule either marks only the first vowel in the word or leaves the word unmarked. I n this case, stress will be assigned to the first syllable of the word and the stressed vowel will have "falling" tone since it is NOT followed by a vowel with [ + H ] . Thus "falling" tone can be found only on the first or only syllable of the word as indicated in Table 1.
24
MORRIS HALLE
The facts represented in Table 1 are quite complex. They are handled with great simplicity and naturalness by the rule system proposed above. As this could hardly be an accidental byproduct of our rule system we take the case just examined as further evidence supporting the approach that we have taken here. In addition to accounting for the peculiar distributions of the tones as well as being supported by the surface phonetics, the proposed stress assignment rule and the convention on interpreting "rising" and "falling" tones explains also the fact well known to all students of comparative Slavic accentology that in cognate words the accented vowel with "falling" tone in Standard Stokavian corresponds to the stressed vowel in Russian, whereas the accented vowel with "rising" tone in Standard Stokavian corresponds to the pretonic vowel in Russian. (3)
Stokavian "falling" tones vodu 'water' noslS 'carry' (acc. sg.) (2nd sg.)
lipa 'linden'
zuba 'tooth' (gen. sg.)
Russian vodu 'water' nos,iS 'carry' l,ipa 'linden' zuba 'tooth' (acc. sg.) (2nd sg.) (gen. sg.) Stokavian "rising" tones sbstra 'sister' jezik 'tongue' naroda 'people' (gen. sg.) Russian s,istra 'sister'
jizyk
'tongue'
naroda 'people' (gen. sg.)
Needless to say, there are substantial differences between the Russian and Stokavian rules for [ + H ] assignment, but to the extent that these are the same, the difference in surface phonetics reflects differences between the Russian and Stok avian STRESS ASSIGNMENT and NEUTRALIZATION rules, of which, for our purposes, the former is the more important one. 3. We next turn to a different dialect of Serbo-Croatian, the Cakavian dialect of Novi which, for good reason, has occupied a central portion in all discussions of Slavic accentology ever since it was described by BeU6 in 1909. This dialect has, like those already exam-
REMARKS ON SLAVIC ACCENTOLOGY
25
ined, a rule assigning [ + H ] which, except for certain deviations of detail, corresponds to that of Russian and Stokavian. It also has an H DISTRIBUTION rule and a STRESS ASSIGNMENT rule. The last of these is exactly like that of Russian, not of Stokavian, in that it assigns stress to the last [ + H ] in the word. (4)
Novi
Russian
gora gòru gòre gorami
gara goru gory garam,i
'mountain'
(nom. sg.) (acc. sg.) (nom. pi.) (instr. pi.)
If we assume that "rising" tone is, as in Stokavian, the consequence of a stressed vowel followed by a vowel with high pitch, then clearly we cannot expect this dialect to have vowels with "rising" tone. The dialect, however, has "rising" tones. According to all investigators, these "rising" tones are not identical with the rising tones of Stokavian. One's first impulse would be to say that the "rising" tone in the Novi dialect is to be represented by the feature [+Rise]. 4 This move, however, is one that I should like to avoid, for, as noted above, Nancy Woo has given strong reasons for believing that the framework of prosodic features does not include such dynamic tones as "rise" or "fall". As it is impossible at this point to resolve this question we shall provisionally introduce the feature [ + R ] to designate the "rising" tone of Novi. I return to this question in the discussion of the Slovene data below, where a new interpretation is offered that leaves Nancy Woo's proposed limitation intact. We assume, therefore, provisionally that in the Novi dialect there is operative a rule — we shall call it the NEOACUTE rule — which assigns the feature [ + R ] to stressed vowels. Our task now is to characterize the conditions under which the NEOACUTE rule applies. The conditions show up most clearly in the examples (5) which should be compared with the Russian verbs discussed in §1. (5)
zenlt 'marry' (inf.) palit 'burn' (inf.)
zenii (2nd sg.) paliS (2nd sg.)
We distinguish the Stokavian rising tone from the Cakavian and Slovene by using the diacritics ' 1 for the former and the diacritic ~ for the latter. We use " to represent the falling short and long tones respectively in all South Slavic languages. 4
26
MORRIS
HALLE
If we assume underlying representations like those postulated for the Russian verbs in e 1, we get zen-\-i-\-t
zenJri-\-i-\-i
+ H
pal-\-i-\-t
+ H
pdl-^i-j-iS
+ H
- f H H
ASSIGNMENT
We observe immediately t h a t the neoacute appears on a long vowel which in the underlying representation precedes a vowel with [-J-H]. However, as the infinitive form palit shows, not every long vowel in this position has rising stress but only the long vowel t h a t ends up with the stress. To achieve the result we need, we have to assume t h a t the Novi dialect differs from the dialects reviewed so far in t h a t before the TRUNCATION rule it incorporates a N E O A C U T E rule which assigns the feature [ + R ] to a long vowel when followed by a vowel with [ + H ] . I n addition the dialect is subject to a N E U T R A L I ZATION rule which applies after the S T R E S S A S S I G N M E N T rule and makes all unstressed vowels |
. With these modifications we
can derive the correct stress contours as shown: zen+i+i +H +H +H +H 0 i
[-*] zenit
pal-\-i-\-t pal-\-i-\-i-\-s +H
+H
+H
+H
+R
+R
H
ASSIGNMENT
H
DISTRIBUTION
NEOACUTE
0
e
TRUNCATION JER
DELETION
JER
LOWERING
STRESS
r
zènis
ASSIGNMENT
NEUTRALIZATION
päßt
pSllè
OUTPUT
We can immediately test our proposal because we know of another set of forms where the neoacute ought to appear, i.e. in forms where a weak jer must be assumed to have [ + H ] , e.g. in oxytone nouns similar to the Russian stol - stala. And indeed we find as shown in (6a) t h a t when such nouns have a long stem vowel they manifest rising tone; when the stem vowel is short, the tone is falling as shown in (6b). (6) a. ban — barii 'governor' brest — brestd, 'elm' sud-sudd 'law court' lih — liha 'garden' glav — glava 'head' trav - trdva 'grass'
27
REMARKS ON SLAVIC ACCENTOLOGY
b. krov - krovd 'roof' bob - boba 'pea' bat - bata 'club' m&st — masta 'juice' cep — cepa 'stopper' pbp — popa 'priest' The examples in (6a) and (5) are not the only cases where we find "rising" tone in the Novi dialect. I t appears, for instance, in such forms as those in (7) which differ thus strikingly from those in (6b): (7)
stol — stol& 'table' dvor — dvora 'yard' sestar - sestra 'sister' stdrca - starac 'old man'
The simplest way to handle these cases would be by postulating a
[
I T)
+long — to stressed vowels before a liquid which may be word fina or followed by at least one consonant; i.e. in the environment [X L(C]Y)]. The proposed rule would have to apply after stress assignment and clearly cannot be combined in any way with the NEOACT7TE rule. A case of considerably greater interest is provided by the existence in the Novi dialect of such accentual doublets of the loc. pi. forms as those in (8): (8) a. vldsih 'hair' brestih 'elm' krovih 'roof' b. vldsih brestih krovih We can readily obtain the forms in (8a) by assuming the H ASSIGNMENT rule assigns [+13] to the word final jer of the inflectional ending. The output is then derived in the manner of (9): (9)
krovihb -F-H + H + H + R
H
ASSIGNMENT
H
DISTRIBUTION
NEOACTJTE
——
VOWEL TRUNCATION 0
JER DELETION JER LOWERING
I
STRESS ASSIGNMENT
—H
NEUTRALIZATION
krovih
OUTPUT
On the other hand to obtain krovih and the rest of the examples in (8b) we must assume that the dialect is subject to a special RETRAC-
28
MOREIS TT AT,TT;
rule (10) which if it is made to apply before JER DELETION and before STRESS ASSIGNMENT can be stated as in (10). TION
(10)
RETRACTION
-H —R
V
/
/
cn
X
in certain cases
I t can readily be seen t h a t this would give the correct outputs for the forms in (8b). I t must also be noted t h a t the RETRACTION rule is what has been called a "minor" rule, i.e. a rule whose application is highly restricted both morphologically and lexically. Belie (1909) suggests t h a t "if the medial (i.e. stem — M. H.) syllable is short the stress goes to the very end, whereas if it is long the stress (and it is ") is on t h a t syllable", (p. 210) Hence we get (11) a. sokolih b. golubih
'falcon' prstenih
'ring' (with short stem vowels)
'dove'
'cooks' 'raspberry' (with longstem vowels)
kuharih malinih
The rule, however, seems to be optional as shown by the examples (quoted from Belie) cited in (8) above. 5 We note also that the inflectional ending of the gen. sg. of certain feminine stems exhibits rising pitch: (12)
zene
'woman' lihe 'garden' gore 'mountain'
We shall assume t h a t there is a special rule t h a t assigns a rising tone to this desinential vowel. This rule might conceivably be part of the rule mentioned above which assigns rising pitch to vowels followed by a sonorant which in turn is followed by a consonant or a word boundary.
6
A retraction rule formally similar to (10) also appears t o be operating in Modern Russian where it accounts for such accentual alternations as ugla ugal 'corner' ugl,a ~ ugal 'coal' bal,na ~ bol,in 'ill'
uzla ~ uz,il 'knot' kruiiva ~ Jcruziv 'lace' ravna ~ rov,in 'even'
I have discussed these cases in Halle (1971).
ugr,a ~ ugar'
'eel'
29
REMARKS ON SLAVIC ACCENTOLOGY
4. There is a special Stokavian dialect group, the so-called Slavonian dialects, which exhibits both types of "rising" tone, the one we find in the literary Stokavian dialects as well as the one in the Cakavian dialects. The Slavonian dialects have been studied in some detail by various scholars, including S. Iv§ic, who first drew attention to them in 1911, and P. Ivic, who devoted a chapter to them in his Die serboIcroatischen Dialekte I (Mouton, 1958). (13) vratim 'turn' (lstsg.) vrdtit (inf.) noz-noza 'knife' turit 'put' (3rdsg.) turit (inf.) sacuvam 'keep' - cuvat (inf.) To understand these examples we need to look at underlying forms of some of the forms just cited: +H vrati-\-i-\-m
+H vrati-\-t
+H noz-j-'b
+H noz-\-a
We then see readily that the NEOACUTE rule will assign [ + R ] to the long vowel in the pre-H position. The TRUNCATION and JER DELETION rule will delete the last [ + H ] vowel in vratim and noz respectively but not in vrdtit and noza, leaving us with distinct output forms a a I vr + R m vr + R -H -|-8tress_ +stress "+o ' +R stress
5
+R
-f stress
Ul U]
i.e. we get acute ' when a [ + H ] vowel follows; neoacute "when it does not. 6 5. We now turn to what is without doubt the most complicated of the prosodic systems found in the Slavic languages — that of Slovene. The handbooks tell us that Slovene has three types of accented 6
The stress assignment rule of Slavonian is not perfectly clear to me as there seem to be a great many dialectal variations (see Ivi6 1958, 285-290 and IvSic 1912, 22-24). I shall assume here that the dialect from which the examples are drawn assigns stress to the penultimate vowel with [ + H ] , if possible, and to the only [ + H ] otherwise.
30
MORRIS HALLE
vowel: one short, and two long. The short vowel is saidtohave always falling pitch; whereas there is a contrast between the two long vowels: one is rising and the other is falling. The rising pitch of Slovene is not to be identified with that of Stokavian ; it is rather like the Novi neoacute. (14) N G D A I L
'linden' lipa Itpe llpi UpQ lipq lipi
'mountain' ggra gqre ggri ggrS 9W9 gqri
'path' stazà stazè stazi stazó StdZÒ stazi
'crayfish' ràk ràka ràku ràka ràkom ràku
'man' mòz mqza rnQzu mqza mòzem mózu
'column' stabdr stabrà stabrìù, stabar stabrqm stvbrft.
N G D A I L
Itpe Up lipam lipe lipami lipah
gqre gqrà gqràrn gore gqràmi gqräh
stazé stazà stazàm stazé stdzämi stazäh
ràki ràkqv ràkqm rake ràki ràkih
mqzjè rriQZ mqSem mqzè mqzmì mqzeh
stabrì stabrgv stabròm stabr\ stabrì stabreh
As shown in the examples in (15) below, the stress in Slovene words is placed on the same vowel as in Standard Stokavian rather than as in the Novi dialect: (15) Slovene Stokavian Novi
zfwa 'woman' zena Sena
kljuca 'key' kljtica kljuca
clqv^k 'human being' clovek covtk
I propose therefore that Slovene has a STRESS ASSIGNMENT rule that, like the rule in Standard Stokavian, assigns stress to the penultimate vowel with [ + H ] if possible.7 There is, however, one fundamental difference between Slovene and Standard Stokavian. In Standard Stokavian nouns such as Tipa which belong to the ACUTE category — i.e. which receive [ + H ] on the stem vowel by the H ASSIGNMENT rule — have "falling" tones 7
The location of stress in circumflex words—i.e. in words to which he H A S S I G N M E N T rule does not apply—is somewhat different in Slovene and will be briefly discussed below [cf. rule (19) and discussion there].
31
REMARKS ON SLAVIC ACCENTOLOGY
on this vowel; in Slovene, on the other hand, as shown in (14) the tone in these forms is usually "rising". In order to account for this difference we shall assume that in Slovene words with acute stems the H ASSIGNMENT rule places [ + H ] not on the stem vowel but on the next syllable, e.g., +H lip-\-a
+H
'linden'
rak-\-a
'crayfish'
+H deklic-j-a
'girl'
Subsequent to this the H DISTRIBUTION rule applies and converts these strings to +H+H
+H+H
lip-\-a
rak-\-a
+H+H deklic-\-a
It is a well-known fact that in Serbo-Croatian acute stem vowels are always short, whereas circumflex stem vowels maintain distinctive length, which is also maintained in the stem vowels of oxyTONE stems. In terms of the rule system developed here this suggests that for Serbo-Croatian a rule should be postulated which applies before H DISTRIBUTION and shortens vowels marked [ + H ] by the H ASSIGNMENT rule. While such a shortening rule is appropriate for Serbo-Croatian, it does not seem justified for Slovene. To see this consider how we would account for the Slovene forms r&k (nom. sg.) and Up (gen. pi.). If underlying representations are postulated that correspond to the etymology, we should get long vowels in both words. rak-\-b
+H
lip-\-b
+H
If there is a shortening rule in the grammar, this would normally be expected to apply to the stem vowel in both words as both words are acute. But this does not conform to the facts; in rak the vowel is short; in lip it is long. We should, therefore, assume that there is no shortening rule in Slovene; instead of that the respective words appear in the lexicon with distinctive length: rak-1-6
+H
lip-\-b
+H
The rules developed to this point will locate the stress in its proper position in the Slovene words under discussion. They do not account, however, for the fact that the stem vowel in the oblique case forms
32
MORRIS H A L L E
of rak is long (e.g. raka gen. sg.) nor for the different tones on the stem and desinential vowels in (14). To account for the long vowel in the oblique case forms we postulate a special LENGTH rule that lengthens stressed vowels in nonfinal syllable [cf. (16) below]. The vowel [a] appears always as short: this can be captured either by restricting the LENGTH rule or by adding a special rule to the NEUTRALIZATION and REDUCTION rules. Since nothing of relevance to the topic under discussion hinges on this decision I shall assume that the LENGTH rule is limited to vowels other than a, a fact which I capture by the asterisk on the symbol V* : (16)
LENGTH
y*
[+long]/[X
+stress
C 0 VY]
As a consequence of this rule the only position where stressed short vowels can be found in Slovene is the last syllable of the word. The question of the tone features in Slovene is to be discussed next. Slovene has both rising and falling tones on stressed long vowels, whereas stressed short vowels have falling tone only. The rising tone in Slovene is like that of the Novi dialect. It is found, however, not only in words that are cognate to the Novi words with rising pitch but also in words that are cognate to thè Stokavian words with rising tone [cf. (15)], though as noted above the Slovene rising tone is phonetically a totally different phenomenon. We shall assume therefore that Slovene has a special rule assigning the feature [ + R ] to stressed long vowels in position before a vowel with [-|-H]. (17)
RISE Y*
L
+stress]
f+H] /
C0
V +H
H
(In view of the LENGTH rule there is no need to restrict R I S E to long vowels, but 9 must be excluded.) We observe immediately the formal similarity between the LENGTH rule (16) and the R I S E rule (17). Both apply to stressed vowels other than a in nonfinal syllables of a word. This suggests that the two rules should be ordered next to each other so that it should be possible to coalesce them into a schema with the help of the notational conventions of our theory. We shall not do it here
33
REMAKES ON SLAVIC ACCENTOLOGY
since the RISE rule will undergo considerable modifications as the discussion proceeds. I t suffices to note for our purposes t h a t the two rules can be ordered adjacent to oneanother. If it is nowassumed t h a t the two rules follow the STRESS rule, forms such as raka, with rising tone on the stem vowel, are readily explained. The falling tone in Slovenian is found on stressed vowels when these are in the last syllable of the word. As noted above, in view of the LENGTH rule this is the only position where stressed vowels can be short. Moreover, because of the RISE rule falling tone can appear on long vowels only when the next vowel is not [ + H ] , or if there is no vowel following. We shall assume then t h a t PALLING is simply the term used to describe the quality of a stressed vowel t h a t is not followed by a vowel marked [ + H ] , and like Standard Stokavian, Slovene will have no special rule assigning the feature [ + f a l l ing tone] to some stressed vowel. These preliminaries out of the way, we now must consider more carefully the tonal features of the stem vowels in the declension of lipa and rale. We have proposed above t h a t in both declensions the H ASSIGNMENT rule places [ + H ] on the desinence. We should therefore expect, in general, rising tones on the stem vowel. An examination of (14) reveals, however, that there are quite a number of forms where the stem vowel has falling tone. These must now be explained. The appearance of falling tone in the nom. sg. rah presents no difficulty as soon as it is realized t h a t this form has a jer as its desinence. Since this jer is deleted before stress is assigned the stressed stem vowel in these forms can never be subject to the RISE rule and hence the forms will appear with falling stress in the output. To account for the falling tone in the instr. sg. and gen. pi. of lipa and in the loc. sg., gen. pi., instr. pi., loc. pi. of rah we must add a rule to the grammar. A straightforward solution is provided by a METATONY rule t h a t in these cases changes [ + H ] in the last syllable of the word to [—H]; for example, +H+H +H-H lip-\-o —>- lip-\-o We order this rule after the STRESS rule and before the Formally the rule might then read as
RISE
rule.
34 (18)
MORRIS HATJ/F! METATONY-1 V
H] I [X
C„] , inatr. fem. sg. I instr. mase. pi. 1 loc. masc. pi.
Since the RISE rule follows METATONY, the former cannot apply in the cases under discussion, and these forms will appear in the output with falling tone as required. Consider now the accentual patterns in the circumflex stems exemplified in (14) by stabar, moz, ggra, staza. We note that in stems with a as stem vowels the stress goes on the second syllable. Many of the forms of nouns with a full vowel in the stem also show stress on the second syllable. Moreover, forms with and without prepositions such as ggro but nagQro, gqre but nagore provide further support for the proposal that in circumflex words stress goes on the second syllable. The major exceptions to this rule are forms with a full stem vowel such as ggra, ggri, mozu, all of which end with a short vowel. These forms require special treatment which cannot be discussed here. (I intend to deal with these forms in a subsequent publication.) Once these forms are excluded from consideration, the circumflex stems can all be said to be subject to (19):8 (19)
CIRCUMFLEX STRESS
rule
V^[+JeSS]/[C0VC0
X]
Given the above discussion of the conditions that determine falling tone on stressed vowels we should expect falling tones in all forms of circumflex nouns. An examination of the paradigms of ggra, staza, moz, and stabar in (14), however, shows that we get rising tone on the desinences precisely in those cases where in the acute paradigms of rak and llpa the stem vowel has falling in place of the expected rising tone [cf. rule (18)]. For convenience we repeat in (20) below 8 I assume that (19) follows and is disjunctive with respect to the stress rules that apply to "acute" forms; i.e. to forms that contain a vowel marked [+H] by the H ASSIGNMENT rule. The rule (19) as stated supplies not only stress but also high tone ([+H]). This is required in order to insure the correct falling tone in such forms as goro rnoza gorami. It gains additional support in that it allows us to combine rules (18) and (20) into a single rule (see discussion at end of section 5).
35
REMARKS ON SLAVIC ACCENTOLOGY
those case forms where acute nouns have falling tone on the stem and circumflex nouns have rising tone on the desinence: (20)
i n s t r . sg. fern. i n s t r . pi. m a s c . loc. pi. m a s c .
lipo raki rakih
gqr$ mqzmi mqzeh
stazo stdbri stdbreh
In view of falling tone on the stem vowel in the loc. sg. raku it might have been expected t h a t there would be a rising tone also on the desinence in mozu and stdbru. We recall, however, t h a t rising tones can appear only on long vowels. Since the loc. sg. desinence has a short vowel, the absence of a rising tone in these forms is not a counterexample; it is rather a correct consequence of the fact t h a t all short vowels must be [—R]. To account for the facts illustrated in (20), it would appear, therefore, t h a t the grammar must include a rule which assigns [-f-R] to the stressed vowel in certain case forms of nouns with circumflex stems. I n order to characterize uniquely the environment where the rule is to apply we recall t h a t in nouns with circumflex stems the stressed vowel is the only vowel in the word t h a t is [ + H ] . We provisionally formulate this rule as in (21): (21)
METATONY-2
V — [ + R ] / [X
C],
instr. fem. sg. 1 I instr. masc. pi. j loc. masc. pi*
The solution t h a t we are thus forced to by closely hugging the phonetic ground is not particularly attractive. By including both (18) and (21) in our solution we are stating in effect t h a t two unrelated phonetic processes (the lowering of high pitch and the assignment of "rising" tones) take place in the same, highly idiosyncratic environment. Moreover, by adopting this solution we are giving up the interesting restriction proposed by Nancy Woo t h a t "dynamic" tones such as "rising" or "falling" are not p a r t of the universal feature framework and are always to be viewed as surface phenomena. An alternative solution seemed, therefore, highly desirable. Our problem is to find a common denominator for the two processes represented in the rules (18) and (21). Suppose t h a t "rising" pitches are basically "low" level tones, and t h a t the rise in pitch
36
MORRIS HALLE
t h a t we perceive is due to a return of the voice from the "low" pitch inherent in the stressed vowel to the average pitch of the utterance. If this idea is correct, then rule (21) should assign to the word final vowel instead of a "rising" tone, a low — below normal pitch — tone which we shall designate here by the feature [ + L ] . Rule (21) would then be rewritten as in (22). (22)
METATONY
r+L -H /[X-
P
0 f instr. fem. sg. 1 I instr. masc. pi. I 1 loc. masc. pi. f
We have added the feature [—H] on the right-hand side of the arrow to make explicit the fact t h a t all "low" toned sounds are, by definition, [—H]. We see, moreover, t h a t given this formulation, (22) is identical with (18) except for the appearance of [ + L ] on the righthand side of the arrow. This distinction, however, has no effect on the functioning of the rule, for the sole purpose of METATONY rule (18) was to block the RISE rule (17) from applying to forms such as those in (20), and this purpose is achieved regardless of whether or not [ + L ] appears on the left-hand side of the arrow. Hence the single rule (22) can replace the two rules (18) and (21). I n sum, if our assumption is correct t h a t "rising" tones are surface manifestations of underlying "low" tones, then there is a single explanation — the assignment of a "low" tone to the last vowel in the word — for what on a more superficial view are two distinct processes: the replacement of "rising" tones by "falling" tones in one set of forms and the converse replacement of "falling" tones by "rising" in another set of forms. 9
9
If we let M E T A T O N Y apply to the fem.sg. forms of the preterite participle we can readily account for the tone alternations found in different forms of this participle. We distinguish here three types of cases. In oxytone forms we get such alternations as bll (masc.) molcal
Vila (fem.) molcala
bllo (neuter) molcalo
'beat' 'be silent'
To handle the acute and the circumflex stems the M E T A T O N Y rule has to be extended so as to apply not only in the last syllable of the word, but also in the penultimate syllable:
R E M A R K S ON SLAVIC
37
ACCENTOLOGY
In addition to allowing us to deepen our description in the manner outlined the proposal to view "rising" tones ae surface reflexes of "low" level tones has also direct support in the phonetics of Slovene. We suggested above that the "rising" pitch perception is due to the fact that on such tones the voice returns from a lower than average pitch level to the average pitch. Similarly one might suppose that the "falling" pitch perception is due to the fact that the voice returns from a higher than average to the average ptch. In fact, a number of phoneticians, among them Olaf Broch and J . Toporisiö, have felt that the above is a fairly accurate description of the state of affairs, at least, in some instances. Thus, after the usual comments about rising and falling tones of stressed vowels, Broch notes (p. 326) ". . . in gewöhnlicher rascherer Rede wird die Tonbewegung ausgeglichen. Zum Verlust der Tonbewegung scheint
V
-[-H][X-C.([-HH]
fem. sg. pret. part, instr. fem. sg. instr. masc. pi. loc. masc. pi.
With this extension we can readily account for the tonal alternations in acute verbs such as, e.g.
bral (masc.)
brdla (fern.)
We assume t h a t the H
ASSIGNMENT
brdlo (neut.)
'take'
rule assigns [ + H ] to the stem vowel.
A s a result we should get " f a l l i n g " tone in all forms. The extended
METATONY
rule, however, applies to the fem. sg. forms and assigning to the penultim a t e vowel the features
provides the stem vowel in these forms with
" r i s i n g " tone. F o r m s with circumflex stems behave similarly to forms with acute stems, e.g.
koval dajal
kovala dajala
kovalo dajdlo
'forge' 'give'
The C I R C U M F L E X S T R E S S rule (19) accounts for the falling tone on the second syllable of these forms. I n the fem. form the extended M E T A T O N Y rule converts the " f a l l i n g " to " r i s i n g " tone in the manner outlined above. The extended M E T A T O N Y rule applies also in nouns with polysyllabic stems such a s
d^klica (nom. sg.)
deklico (instr. sg.)
'girl'
I hope to treat these metatonies in greater detail as well a s other questions of Slovene accentology in a separate paper now in preparation. See also note 3.
38
MORRIS HALLE
besonders geneigt die Silbe unter die sehr häufig von steigendem zu annähernd ebenem Ton übergeht; aber auch unter ~ verliert die Silbe oft einen Teil der Tonbewegung, und zwar den letzten, tiefen Teil. Auf diese Weise entsteht aber zwischen den gegebenen langen Silben ein neuer tonischer Gegensatz; wenn auch die fallende und die steigende Bewegung schwindet, so bleibt doch, mehr oder weniger deutlich, für die relativ hohe Tonlage und für " die relativ niedrige Tonlage, welche ursprünglich nur dem Anfangsteil des betreffenden Akzentes eigen war." And in a footnote on the same page Broch adds: "Bei meinem Untersuchungen bemerkte ich nicht selten bei einem meiner Gewährsmänner die Neigung für ~ einen höheren Ton als der der nichtakzentuierten Silben, für ~ aber 'Tiefton', einen entsprechend tieferen zu gebrauchen: ~ = ~ ; ~ = ^ . Jedoch dürfte dies individuell sein und vielleicht durch den Wunsch hervorgerufen, dem Beobachter die Unter Scheidung der Typen zu erleichtern."10 In other words, the assumption that rising and falling tones are surface reflexes of stationary low and high tones, respectively, not only leads to a greatly simplified system of phonological rules, but is apparently quite directly supported by the phonetic actualization of the tones in normal, unforced discourse. 6. In concluding I should like to recall the two theoretical considerations that have guided this study. I believe that the data reviewed support quite strongly Nancy Woo's proposal that "dynamic" tones are always phonetic phenomena of a superficial sort similar perhaps to such other phonetic surface phenomena as the vowel transition associated with particular consonantal points of articulation, the greater loudness of low vowels, or the tendency not to release a stop when the next segment is also a stop. What is significant here is that when "dynamic" tones were viewed in this very special way, the phonological processes of the dialects examined became more transparent, more understandable. Needless to say that what has been brought out here is far from conclusive, but as a step towards establishing Woo's hypothesis it is surely not negligible. The second hypothesis of importance was Roman Jakobson's insight that Slavic accentual phenomena are best viewed as deriv10
I have replaced Broch's diacritic mark * by ~ to make it consistent with the usage of the rest of this article.
REMARKS
ON SLAVIC
39
ACCENTOLOGY
!z¡ O M > m
S fi
£
oc
fc O M Eh
tJ M Eh ^
'S
-p fi o -fi -S
S
EH «!
S
M oo
o M
O ¡z¡
— CD G
M
«
ti ti W H i-s ^
oo e3
pfi CS ^
2 EH •4 N
00 43
h &
ti p
O 43
H a
00
40
MORRIS HALLE
ing from a stage in which the language resembled a simple "terrace tone'' language like Japanese. While Jakobson understood his proposal primarily in diachronic terms I hope that the discussion above has shown that the conception holds true also synchronically, where derivation is understood in the normal sense of generative phonology. As in the case of the first hypothesis the significant fact is not that by using a particular approach a body of data can be catalogued, but rather that when this approach is used a host of complicated facts appear to fall neatly into place. Several examples have been cited in the body of the paper, but perhaps none is as impressive as the clear picture of relatedness among different dialects which emerges when we juxtapose, as in (24), the ordered sets of rules that had to be postulated to handle the particular data of the different dialects that have been studied here.
Massachusetts Institute
of Technology
REFERENCES Belie, A. 1909 "Zametki po èakavskim govoram", Izvestija otd. russkogo jazyka i slovesnosti Imperatorskoj Akademii Nauk 14 (2), 181-266. Broch, O. 1911 Slavische Phonetik (Carl Winter, Heidelberg). Chomsky, N. and M. Halle 1968 The Sound Pattern of English (Harper and Row, New York). Coats, H. S. 1970 "Word Stress Assignment in a Generative Grammar of Russian", unpublished Doctoral dissertation, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois. Halle, M. 1970 "A Note on the Accentual Patterns of the Russian Nominal Declension", R. Jakobson and S. Kawamoto, eds., Studies in General and Oriental Linguistics (TEC Company Ltd., Tokyo), 167-174. Halle, M. 1971 "A Minor Accentual Rule of Contemporary Standard Russian". L. L. Hammerich, et. al., eds., Form and Substance (Akademisk Forlag, Copenhagen), 211—219. Ivic, P. 1958 Die serbokroatischen Dialekte I (Mouton, The Hague). Ivsic, S. 1913 "Danasni posavski govor", Rad Jugoslavenske Akademije znanosti i umjetnosti (Zagreb) 196, 124-204; 197, 9-138.
REMARKS ON SLAVIC ACCENTOLOGY
41
Jakobson, R . 1963 " O p y t fonologièeskogo podxoda k istoriöeskim voprosam slavjanskoj akcentologii", American Contributions to the Fifth International Congress of Slavists (Mouton, The Hague), 153-178. Jakobson, R . 1965 "Information and Redundancy in t h e Common Slavic Prosodie P a t t e r n " , Symbolae Linguisticae in Honorem Oeorgii Kurylowicz (Polska Akademia Nauk, Wroclaw-Warszawa-Kraków), 145151. Lehiste, I. and P . Ivic 1963 Accent in Serbocroatian ( = Michigan Slavic Materials 4) (Departm e n t of Slavic Languages and Literatures, Ann Arbor). Lightner, T. M. 1965 "Segmental Phonology of Modern Standard Russian", unpublished Doctoral dissertation, MIT, Cambridge, Mass. L u n t , H . G. 1966 "An A t t e m p t a t a Generative Description of t h e Slovene Verb", in R . L. Lencek, The Verb Pattern of Contemporary Standard Slovene (Otto Harrassowitz, Wiesbaden), 133-187. Svane, G. O. 1958 Grammatik der slowenischen Schriftsprache (Rosenkilde u n d Bagger, Copenhagen). Toporisiö, J . 1968 "Liki slovenskih tonemov", SlavistiSna Eevija 16, 315-393. Woo, N. H . 1969 "Prosody and Phonology", unpublished Doctoral dissertation, MIT, Cambridge, Mass. Zaliznjak, A. A. 1967 Russhoe imennoe slovoizmenenie (Nauka, Moscow).
ON 'HAVE' AND 'BE' LANGUAGES (A Typological Sketch) A L E X A N D E R V. ISACENKO
1. In recent years, the manifold structural (syntactic and semantic) interrelations between the verbs have and be have been the subject of numerous stimulating and challenging studies.1 The attention of most investigators is focused on what is usually called the 'possessive' relation and on its surface manifestations indifferent languages. A hypothesis has been formulated by John Lyons according to which "in many, perhaps in all, languages existential and possessive constructions derive (both synchronically and diachronically) from locatives".2 The evidence upon which this hypothesis is based is taken from Latin and some modern West European languages. Languages in which the verb have either does not exist at all or is restricted in its use are quoted in isolated and trivial examples and interpreted within a ready framework of semantic and syntactical relations which are said to be 'universal'. In a recent study on having and being in Estonian lise Lehiste adduced ample evidence for the fact that a variety of constructions in which English would use the verb have are implemented in Estonian by constructions using the verb be? 1 W. S. Allen, "Transitivity and Possession", Language 40 (1964), 337-343. — E. H. Bendix, Componential Analysis of General Vocabulary : The Semantic Structure of a Set of Verbs in English, Hindi, and Japanese (Bloomington: Indiana University Press and The Hague: Mouton, 1966). — E. Benveniste, "'Être' et 'avoir' dans leurs fonctions linguistiques", BSL, LV (1960), 113-134. — C . H. Kahn, "The Greek Verb 'to be' and the Concept of Being", Foundations of Language 2 (1966), 245-265. — J. Kurylowicz, "Les temps composés du roman ", Prace FUologiczne 15 (1931), 448-453 [Reprinted in Esquisses linguistiques (Wroclaw and Krak6w, I960)]. — I. Lehiste, " 'Being' and 'Having' in Estonian", Foundations of Language 5 (1969), 324-341. — J. Lyons, "A Note on Possessive, Existential and Locative Sentences", Foundations of Language 3 (1967), 390-396. 2 J. Lyons, op. cit., 390. 8 I. Lehiste, op. cit.
44
A L E X A N D E R Y. ISACENKO
All Indo-European and Finno-TJgric languages have the verb be, but only some of them also use a verb corresponding to have. The absence of the verb have or its restricted use in some languages has far reaching consequences for their entire semantic and syntactical structure. Be and have constructions form the kernel of syntax, and it is by no means unjustified to polarize modern European languages into Twwe-languages (H-languages) and -languages (B-languages). The former include English, German, Dutch and the other Germanic languages, French and the other Romance languages, Czech, Slovak and Serbo-Croatian as well as Lithuanian. The latter include Finnish, Estonian, Hungarian and Russian, as well as Latvian. 4 Polish, Ukrainian and Belorussian seem to be in a state of transition from B-languages to H-languages. 2. I t is well known t h a t Indo-European was a B-language a n d t h a t the verbal stems *es- and *bhu- very early merged into a suppletive paradigm preserved in most historically attested I E idioms. I t is also known t h a t verbs meaning 'have' are secondary acquisitions in all I E languages and t h a t such verbs stem from transitive verbs with the general meaning 'to hold, to grasp'. This is true of Greek £%eiv 'to have' (originally 'to hold'), 5 of Latin habere which is related to capere 'to catch, get hold of'; 6 it is true of Germanic *habai- which yielded ME have, Germ haben and is not related to Latin habere, but to Goth hafjan, ME heave, Germ heben;7 the Slavic verb *jbmëti 'to have' (R iméijiméju, Cz mîtijmâm, Slk maf/mam, etc.) is formed from the root *jbm- as attested in OCS jçti (from *jem-ti) 'to take'. The semantic change 'take' —>- 'have' occurred in historical times in Spanish, where tengo 'I have' is derived from VLat tenire 'to hold'. 8 4
Cf. J. Marvan, "K otâzkàm kategorie slovesného spusobu v soucasné lotystinë", Acta Universitatis Carolinae — Philologica Slavica Pragensia IV (1962), 254. 5 Cf. E. Boisacq, Dictionnaire étymologique de la langue grecque (2nd éd.; Heidelberg-Paris, 1923), 302-303. 8 Cf. A. Ernout and A. Meillet, Dictionnaire étymologique de la langue latine (Paris, 1932), 421-422. 7 F. Kluge/W. Mitzka, Etymologisches Wôrterbuch der deutscken Sprache (18th éd.; Berlin, 1960), 278. 8 A brilliant presentation of the problem was given by A. Meillet in "Le développement du verbe avoir", AntidôronJ. Wackernagel (1924), 9-13.
ON 'HAVE' AND 'BE' LANGUAGES
45
There is, of course, nothing metaphysical about H-languages and B-languages. The first European language to have introduced the verb have was Greek; other languages acquired the verb have in historical times and Awe-constructions are spreading at a steadily increasing rate, affecting the semantics of numerous 'relational' verbs in the central layers of the vocabulary. Since the 'possessive' relation is usually considered to be the most representative for the distinction between have and be constructions, we shall start our observations with the analysis of predicative "possessive" constructions in Russian. 3. According to John Lyons, "Russian possessives in predicate position are patently related to locatives". 9 In Russian constructions of the type u A (est) B the question whether they should be translated as A has B or There is B near A depends, according to Lyons, very largely upon whether A is a personal noun or not. 10 This assertion is at variance with observational adequacy. Take the following three sentences: (1) (2) (3)
U Péti est' masina 'Peter has a car' Masina u Péti 'The car is with/at Peter' Masina v garazé 'The car is in the garage'
The prepositional phrase in (2) is not identical with the prepositional phrase in (1), but in (3). Both v garazé and u Péti (in 2) may be labelled 'local' in a rather wide sense, but only v garaze is a locative proper, whereas u Péti (2) is adessive. 11 On the other hand, 9
J. Lyons, op. cit., 394. Ibid. 11 An excellent semantic analysis of the preposition u in Russian is given by R. Mràzek and J. Brym in "Sémantika a funkc-e ruského genitivu s pfedlozkou 'u' ", Sbornik praci filosofické fakulty bménské university A - 1 0 (1962), 99-118. Anyone working on problems related to ours should have read this paper. It is based on an unusually rich collection of examples, some of which are utilized in our presentation. The authors posit for Russian u a 'general meaning' as expressing a 'relation of a very close participation of something in something' (p. 101). They distinguish four contextual meanings: (l)ablative (on zànjal u menjy dén'gi 'he borrowed money from me'); (2) 'static local' (on byl v gostjàx u Volódi 'he was a guest at Volodja's'); (3) the meaning of 'appurtenance' and 'possession' (syn u menjà ùcitsja v Prage 'my son studies in Prague'), and (4) the 'implicational' (zfetelovy) or 'limitational' meaning (u silnogo bessilnyj vsegdd vinovat 'with the strong one, the feeble is always 10
46
A L E X A N D E R V. ISACENKO
the phrase u Peti in (1) is not interpreted as a 'locative'. The preposition u denotes a specific (and certainly not 'local') relation which for lack of a traditional term we shall label as 'relation of concern or implication'. Note that the difference between the possessive and the local (adessive) interpretation of the u -+- Gen construction depends upon whether the prepositional phrase stands in the topic position (as in 1), or in the comment position (as in 2). Diachronically the relation of the 'implicational' preposition u with the adessive preposition u is very likely, but cannot be established by historical evidence. Slavic u is related to I E *ab 'away' (as in the Latin verbal prefix au-ferre 'carry away' or in R u-nesti 'id.'). The original meaning of the preposition was clearly ablative. The semantic development 'ablative' —»• 'adessive' is difficult to follow historically. But synchronically, the 'implicational' u in Russian is homonymous with the adessive u (as in 2), causing, as we shall show, prepositional phrases u -)- Gen to be ambiguous in numerous instances. In constructions with verbs other than 'be' the preposition u is interpreted as adessive, if the noun of the prepositional phrase is non-personal: (4) (5) (6)
Lampa stoit u okna 'The lamp stands by the window.' P e t j a zil u vokzdla 'Peter lived near the railroad station.' My vstretimsja u ikoly 'We shall meet near/at the school.'
If the noun of the prepositional phrase is personal, the adessive meaning is preserved in constructions with verbs other than be regardless of the topic/comment status of u -f- A which can often be translated into English by 'at A's place': (7) (8)
P e t j a rabotaet u arxitektora 'Peter works at/with an architect' U Peti vstrecajutsja artisty 'Actors meet at Peter's place.'
Again, the topic/comment status of the prepositional phrase does not affect the adessive interpretation of the construction u + Gen.
guilty') (ibid.). The 'ablative' meaning postulated by the authors can be easily included in the more general 'implicationaP meaning, cf. U menjd uTcrdli Semoddn 'I had a suitcase stolen'. The normal ablative preposition in Russian is ot.
ON
'HAVE'
AND
'BE'
LANGUAGES
47
4. There exists in Russian a variety of sentences traditionally called 'impersonal' which we prefer to label 'subjectless' or 'predicatesentences'. 12 Since the verb be is deleted in the present, we shall symbolize this verb by E: (9) (9a)
E VeSer (Byl veSer) '(It is) evening (was evening)'. Seg6dnja E teplyj v66er 'Today (it is) a warm evening'.
We interpret the construction E -f- NP in (9) as representing the predicate, the nominal phrase vecer (or teplyj vecer 'a warm evening') being the predicate noun. A similar construction consists of E + Adj (neuter sing.): (10)
E Veselo (Bylo veselo) '(It is) gay (was gay)'.
Such predicate-sentences may be expanded by various adverbials: (10a) Tam vsegda E veselo 'There always (it is) gay'. Sentences of the type (10) may be expanded by adverbials consisting of the prepositional phrase u Gen; they will always be interpreted as adessive: (10b) U Peti vsegda E veselo 'At Peter's it is always gay'. 18 The problem of 'impersonal' sentences in Russian has been discussed in the framework of generative grammar by E . Klima, IJSLP V I (1963), 146-152. — R . RuziCka, "O transformacionnom opisanii t a k nazyvaemyx bezlidnyx predlozenij v sovremennom russkom literaturnom jazyke", Voprosy jazykoznanija 3 (1963), 22-31; V. Hrabg and P . Adamec, TransformaSni syntax souiasni rustiny, mimeographed (Prague: b y Charles University, 1969), 41-51. Recently, L. R . Micklesen has taken up the issue, utilizing some theoretical assumptions made by K a t z and Postal for English. Impersonal surface constructions are considered by Micklesen to be produced by the deletion of a N O N - A N I M A T E nominal pro-form in the course of the derivational history, cf. "Impersonal Sentences in Russian", American Contributions to the Sixth International Congress of Slavists (The Hague: Mouton, 1969), preprint. While doubtlessly helping to explain some of the syntactical problems posed by impersonal surface constructions (such as the 'agreem e n t ' of the predicate with a N O N - A N I M A T E neuter singular 'subject'), t h e introduction of a deletable d u m m y does not really eliminate the difference between sentences which appear as 'personal' or 'impersonal' in their surface structures, since even in the deep structure there will remain the essential difference between sentences with non-deletable and with deletable subjects. I n this paper we cannot go into the details connected with what we call 'predicate-sentences'.
48
A L E X A N D E R V. ISACENKO
But in sentences of the type (9) the prepositional phrase may be ambiguous: (11)
U Péti segódnja E koncért 'Peter has a concert tonight'.
The Russian sentence (11) is ambiguous in exactly the same way as is the corresponding English ^ewe-construction; it may mean: (a) Peter has to perform in a concert tonight; (b) Peter has to attend a concert as listener tonight; (c) There is a concert at Peter's place tonight. I t is clear that the ambiguity of (11) in Russian is due to the polysemy of the constructions u -f- Gen -f E. In the readings (a) and (b) the construction is interpreted as 'implicational', in (c) as adessive or local. I n much the same way the predicate sentence Sejcàs vezdé E gripp 'Now everywhere (there is) the flu' becomes ambiguous, if vezdé is replaced by a phrase u Gen : (12)
Sejòas u Màrkovyx E gripp.
In English, sentence (12) with implicational u would mean 'The Markovs have the flu now', b u t with the adessive u the reading would be 'There is flu at the Markovs' ' implying that the Markovs themselves may not at all have the flu, but their cook is ill. The difference between the implicational and the adessive meanings of u -f- Gen is ultimately due to the presence of two different verbs in the underlying structure. If (9) has to be interpreted as 'The Markovs have the flu' (implicational relation), the symbol E stands for the attributive or 'copulative' be, cf. U Màrkovyx E véselo 'At the Markovs' it is gay'. But if (9) is interpreted as 'There is the flu at the Markovs", the symbol E stands for the existential be 'At the Markovs' there exists the flu'. I n Russian these two meanings of the verb byf have to be distinguished. As was shown by Ben veniste, the existential and the copulative meanings merged into one verb be.13 If in Russian the different interpretation of the u -(- Gen -f E is due to different meanings of the verb byt, then from a synchronic point of view the prepositional phrase u -)- Gen in both constructions can be said to be identical. Note t h a t in Czech, a typical H-language, the two readings of (12) are formally distinguished: 13
E. Benveniste, " 'Ètre' et 'avoir'", 114-115.
ON 'have' and 'be' languages
49
(12a) Markovovi maji chripku 'The Markovs have the flu'. (12b) U Markovovych maji chripku 'At the Markovs' they have the flu'. Characteristically, Russian fee-constructions with an adjective in the predicate as in (10b) correspond in some H-languages to both be and have constructions: (10b) G Bei Peter ist es schön (gemütlich) 'It is nice (cosy) at Peter's'.
Cz U Petra je pekno/je to pekne (utulne). (10c) G Peter hat es schön (gemütlich) 'id.'. Cz Petr to mä pekne (ütuln6). Note that the 'situational' subject es/to of (10b) reappears as the complement of have in (10c). There be can little doubt that the constructions (10b) and (10c) are surface implementations of one and the same deep structure. However, the conversion of fee-sentences into Aave-constructions of this type is limited to certain adjectives: there is no Bei Peter ist es langweilig 'At Peter's it is dull' -»- *Peter hat es langweilig, Cz U Petra je to nudne —* *Peter ma to nvdne. On the other hand, there exist in H-languages Aewe-constructions with adjectives or adverbialized prepositional phrases without corresponding fee-constructions: (13) (14)
G Cz G Cz
Peter hat es eilig 'Peter is in a hurry'. Petr mä to naspech. Peter hat es nötig/notwendig 'Peter needs that'. Petr mä to zapotfebi.
In B-languages such as Russian there are no corresponding haveconstructions (*Petja imeet k spexu). Dative + E constructions are used instead: Mne E k spexu ' I am in a hurry', Mne E nuzno 'I need' (see below 15.4). The intimate relationship between Dative and u + Gen in Russian is evident, but the two are used in complementary distribution: Dative with adjectival predicates, u Gen with nominal predicates.14 Note the correspondence between the following have- and be- constructions: 14 There are very few exceptions to this rule, cf. R Emu E dvadcat 'He is twenty years old', but F II a vingt ana 'He has twenty years'.
let
50 (15) (16)
ALEXANDER V. ISACENKO
F R G Cz R
J'ai froid (chaud) 'I am cold (hot)'. Mne E xolodno (zarko). Ich habe Angst 'I have a fear, I am scared'. Mam strach. Mne E straSno.
5. The evidence of Slavic historical syntax suggests that Common Slavic was a B-language. The numerous constructions with imeti which are to be found in OCS texts are without exception loantranslations from Greek constructions with ¿'%en>.15 The history of the penetration of the verb *jbmeti 'have' into the Slavic languages has to be written yet. In this article we can give only a brief sketch of the penetration of imeti into Russian. All examples of imUi quoted by Sreznevskij (Materidly I, p. 1096) stem from Slavonian (Church Slavic) texts. In the Chronicles imeti occurs exclusively in phraseological units in combination with an abstract noun: imUi mirb, ljubovb, ratb, druzbu, pravdu, serdce, lestb.16 In legal documents we find only imati -)- Acc. meaning 'to take, to receive'. The verb 'have' appears, in a curious Polish—Russian hybrid from miti, mUi (P mie6, mieli) towards the end of the 15th century in the diplomatic correspondence of the Lithuanian Grand Prince Alexander, but it is used as a modal auxiliary meaning 'to have to'.17 Ivan IV, who had a great gift of stylistic mimicry, uses miti (along with numerous other Polonisms) in his messages to S. Batory.18 During the 15th century the Polonism majetnostb 'possession' is frequently used in Russian legal texts without, however, stimulating the use of imeti in the meaning of 'to possess'. Neither the Paris Muscovite Glossary of 1586, nor Richard James' RussianEnglish Glossary of 1618/1619, which are the most reliable sources of our knowledge about the vernacular of the period, mentions the verb imeti. It may be concluded ex silentio that imeti was not used in the vernacular. Curiously enough, the first examples of imeti occur in the quasi-vernacular dialogs which are added to Russian
Cf. Slovnlk jazyka staroslovinskdho 13 (1966), 767-768. Cf. A. I. Hen'sors'kyj, Halyc'ko-volyn'skyj litopys (Kiev, 1961), 156, 163. 17 O doieri svoei, nasoi velikoi k n e g i n i . . . i o panjaxi, Greckogo zakonu, kotoryi byli mSli pri nei miSkati '. . . who had had to stay with her' (1493). 18 . . . oni iotyre zamki v zemli Lifljanskoj . . . v storonu nasu mili xotMi; . . . otpravleny ot tebja byti meli (1581). 15
14
51
ON 'HAVE' AND ' B E ' LANGUAGES
grammars published in the beginning of the 18th century by foreigners.19 The forms imeti, imeju, imejuscij appear with the mark 'Russian' in the anonymous dictionary of the first half of the 18th century ascribed to Tatisfiev. 20 Under the influence of German and French, imeC penetrates into the language of the Russian educated elite in numerous phraseologisms and is firmly established in the literary language by the end of the 18th century. It takes another century until ime^-constructions begin to penetrate into the spoken language of the less educated speakers. 6. In Contemporary Standard Russian the verb imet seems to be fully accepted. The dictionaries give a variety of usages of imet'. The bulk of the examples quoted in recent lexicographical sources 19 Elias Kopijewitz quotes in his Rukovedenie vb grammatyku (1706) only the rather fantastic sentence Im&i sebe dobruju no6b 'have a good night' (p. D2). — In the Anfangs-Grunde der Russischen Sprache (1731), which is usually ascribed to V. E . Adodurov, the entire p a r a d i g m of the verb imet is added to the p a r a d i g m of the verb byt. B o t h verbs are called Verba Auxiliaria (p. 42), which clearly speaks in favor of a non-Russian g r a m m a t i c a l pattern. The Swedish Grammatica Russica b y Michael Groening (1750), which closely follows Adadurov's grammatical sketch, also contains the entire p a r a d i g m of imelb (p. 135). F a r more interesting are the sentences quoted in the Conversations added to the g r a m m a r which seem to reproduce with a high degree of fidelity the spoken language of Russian merchants. We find the following idioms and constructions with imitb : neimeju vremeni ' I h a v e no time' (232, 239, 249), cestb imeju 'I have the honor' (234), On imeetb xoroiej vidb 'He looks good', Onb imietb xoroiej stanb ' H e has a good figure' (248), Vy nikakogo pesku neimeete 'You have no sand' (250), (Pokoj) polo&enie imeetb izrjadnoe '(The room) has an excellent situation' (253), My imeemb izrjadnyja kamorki 'We have excellent rooms' (258), neim&ju oxoty ' I do not feel like' (260), J a imSlb gorjaiku ' I h a d fever' (265), Skolbko zarjadovb poroxu vy imtSete vb svojemb rozkS? 'How m a n y loads of powder do you h a v e in your h o r n ? ' (268). There is only one u + Gen construction: u menja oSenb xoroiija sukna ' I have very good cloths'. Constructions with imSt are frequent in the Sutlivyja i inyja gistorii, added to the g r a m m a r and clearly translated from Western European sources: NSkotoroj P a p a imSja nesnosnyj lomT> vl> k o s t j a x l 'A certain Pope having an unbearable ache in his bones' (283), ja imSju prikazb 'I have the order' (ib.), etc. Some of the phrases seem to be a d hoc translations, e.g. neimStb vremeni (cf. mne nekogda), Ja imilb gorjaSku (cf. U menja byla gorjaika), neimiju oxoty (cf. u menja net oxoty). B u t these examples cannot be simply ignored. 10
Cf. Slovar' sovremennogo russkogo literaturnogo jazyka
5 (1956), 298.
52
A L E X A N D E R V. ISACENKO
are phraseological units with imet + abstract noun whose Western models are self-evident: imet cest 'have the honor', i. sposobnost 'have the aptitude, faculty', i. talant 'have the talent', i. scdst'e 'have the luck', i. ves 'carry weight', i. avtoritet 'have the authority', i. reputdciju 'have the reputation'; i. otnoSenie 'be related to', i. vlijdnie 'have an influence', i. vozmoznost 'have the possibility', i. ponjdtie 'have an idea (about)', i. derzost 'have the impudence', i. terpenie 'have the patience'; i. delo s 'have to do with' (avoir affaire or avoir a, faire), i. mesto 'take place, occur' (avoir lieu), i. slovo 'have the floor', i. uspex 'have success', i. znacenie 'have significance', i. namerenie 'have the intention', etc. There are constructions with nouns denoting measures: imet dlinu 'have the length of', i. Sirinu 'have the width of', i. glubinu 'depth'. The noun may stand in the instrumental in imet zadacej 'have for a task', imet celju 'have for a target' (cf. G zur Aufgabe, zum Ziele haben, or their French equivalents). There even occur examples like imet 30 let 'be 30 years old' (Fr avoir trente ans) ,21 The verb imet also combines with numerous non-abstract nouns such as imet den'gi, dom, maSlnu, druzej 'have money, a house, a car, friends'. All this creates the illusion that imet in Russian has roughly the same range of usages as in German, French or English. 7. To the superficial observer the usage of imet in CSR appears to be unlimited. However, numerous u + Gen constructions have not been replaced by imM constructions (in cases where languages like English have only 'have' constructions), so that Russian has not really become a H-language. The existence of two parallel constructions in Russian leads many scholars to assume that they are freely interchangeable. In a recent article R. Channon discussed the issue in the following way: there exist in Russian constructions of the type U Ivdna (est) mnogo knig and Ivan imeet mnogo knig. One would like to be able to say that these essentially synonymous constructions come from the same deep structure and that "they differ by a late rule which gives them different surface structures and introduces sty-
21
Ibid. R. Channon, "On Passivization in Russian", Studies Presented to Professor Roman Jalcobson by his Students (Cambridge, Mass., 1968), 54. 22
ON ' h a v e ' a n d ' b e '
languages
53
listic differences between them". Channon applies the concepts of Fillmore's 'case syntax' to Russian. The nominal phrase u + Gen is labelled 'Dative' (meaning something like 'beneficient'), the 'possessed object' is called 'Objective' and is said to have the 'objective case marker RO' ( = roditelnyj, Genitive). The verb imet 'to h a v e ' arises f r o m t h e combination of byt 'to be' with t h e objective ease m a r k e r R O = roditelnyj, Genitive. (The rule producing imet m u s t necessarily precede t h e rule which changes t h e objective R O into V I [ = vinitelnyj, Accusative], since t h e objective a f t e r imet undergoes t h e change; special rules are of course needed t o account for t h e syntactic peculiarities of numerals.) Thus, where t h e dative phrase [the u + Gen phrase] is chosen as t h e subject, t h e objective phrase remains and retains its case marker, and t h e verb imet arises f r o m byt + RO (of an objective) a f t e r a noun phrase. Where t h e objective is chosen as the subject, it no longer follows byt and its case m a r k e r R O is deleted, causing byt t o remain. The essential difference here between Russian and English is t h a t Russian allows either noun phrase t o become t h e subject, while English requires t h a t in such sentences t h e dative be t h e subject. These two utterences, then, h a v e t h e same deep structure, which accounts for their identity of meaning, and t h e y differ substantively only in t h e choice of which n o u n phrase is t o be t h e subject. All other differences stem automatically f r o m t h a t one. 23
Probably not all linguists will consider the above discussion to represent the optimal explanation of the obvious affinity between the two constructions. Particulary the 'derivation' of imetivom byt-\Oen strikes one as rather counter-intuitive. The semantic and syntactic relationship between 'possessive' be and have constructions has been known for about fifty years24 and has been discussed in numerous articles since. 'Case syntax' describes certain syntactic rearrangements which take place, if a particular noun phrase is 'chosen for subject'. But the linguistically relevant question is this: What makes the speaker choose a particular phrase as a subject ? Is the speaker fre eto make his choice spontaneously or is he restricted by certain properties of the noun phrases involved? Is it really true that in this particular case the byt and imet constructions differ from each other only 'stylistically' ? Before answering these questions, we have to make several factual remarks. 23
R . Channon, " O n Passivization in Russian", 54. See footnotes 1 and 8. See also H . Safarewiezowa, "Obocznosc ja imeju i u tnenja est w j§zyku rosyjskim dzis i dawniej", Prace komisji jgzyJcoznawstwa, N r 3 (Wroclaw — Warszawa — Krak6w, 1964). 24
54
ALEXANDER Y. ISACENKO
Channon's assumptions are based on inadequate observational data. Like the majority of scholars who adduce only the most trivial examples to illustrate the 'situation in Russian', Channon ignores the following facts: (1) There are numerous non-phraseological 'possessive' u -f- Gen constructions in Russian which cannot be converted into imet constructions, e.g. U nego xoroSee nastroenie 'He is in a good mood' *On imeet xordSee nastroenie. (2) There are numerous non-phraseological 'possessive' imet constructions which cannot be converted into u Gen constructions, e.g. Kniga imeet mnogo illjustrdcij 'The book has many illustrations' —»- * U knigi (est) mnogo illjustracij. (3) The element est in u -}- Gen constructions is not optional, as seems to follow from its being put between brackets by Channon. As for the 'stylistic' differences between u Gen and imet constructions, the situation is rather complicated. I n a great number of cases the two constructions are stylistically neutral and thus interchangeable, especially in the spoken language. The domain of the imet constructions seems to be newspaper Russian and theoretical prose, while u + Gen prevails in colloquial Russian and in fiction. We do not, however, possess reliable data on the relative frequency and stylistic distribution of the two types of construction in CSR. Yet, in numerous cases, there is an appreciable difference: certain imet constructions are felt to be 'less idiomatic' than the corresponding u -f Gen constructions. Purists attribute them to German or Yiddish background and 'non-idiomatic' imet constructions are frequently identified as typical for 'Odessite' Russian. 25 The 'non-idiomatic' flavor of imet constructions is also utilized as a conventional device to characterize the Russian spoken by 'Western' foreigners. 26 All this deserves further investigation. This refers predominantly to constructions with imdt + Infinitive, e.g. Cto vy imiete pred"javit? 'What can you produce (as evidence) ?', a syntactical 25
loan borrowing from Germ Was haben Sie vorzuweisen? 26
Here are some samples of Russian sentences uttered by the 'German spy' Herr Silber in a mystery story 'Tajnik' currently published in the magazine Ogonek (1970, number 6, p. 30): — . . . Vilgelm Pik i Maks Rejman toze est moi sooteSestvenniki. Ja budu nadejaisja, cto frejlejn imeet xorosuju pamjai . . . — To est malen'koe preuveliCenie. Ja imeju skromnyj bagaz znanij . . . — To est prijatnoe sovpadenie. Ja imeju pros'bu vasego papy . . . pri-
ON 'HAVE' A N D 'BE' LANGUAGES
55
8. In Russian, as in many other languages, there are several meanings connected with the verb 'to be'.27 In this context we are interested in the following three meanings: (A) the existential byt; (B) the 'locational' byt, and (C) the 'attributive' or 'copulative' byt. The semantic difference is quite obvious, since each of the three meanings can be implemented by different quasi-auxiliary verbs. The semantic difference also explains the difference in the construction of the corresponding negative sentences: A. Existential (17a) V reke est ryby 'In the river there are fish'. (17b) V reke imejutsja ryby. (17c) V reke net ryb 'In the river there are no fish'. C. Attributive (copulative) (18a) Kit E ryba/Kit est ryba 'The whale is a fish'. (18b) Kit javljaetsja ryboj. (18c) Kit ne E ryba/Kit ne est ryba 'The whale is not a fish'. There is no need to distinguish a special 'equational' meaning in Russian (Pariz E stolica Francii 'Paris is the capital of France'). vezti emu . . . öto-nibud' ljubopytnoe iz iizni sovremennyx sovetskix pisatelej . . . The transformational rules which generate this kind of 'Russian as spoken b y Germans' are very simple: (a) Insert est for t h e zero-form of t h e verb byt in t h e present (Oni ne odinakovy ->- Oni ne eat odinakovy). (b) Replace imperfective present forms b y t h e periphrastic f u t u r e ( J a nadejus' ->- J a budu n a d e j a f s j a ) . (c) Replace u + Gen constructions b y imet constructions (U m e n j a est pros'ba J a imeju pros'bu). (d) Replace t h e pronoun eto b y to (feto prekrasnyj tost -»- To est prek r a s n y j tost). Characteristically, t h e g r a m m a r t h a t converts correct German sentences into ungrammatic sentences as uttered b y a Russian contains a rule b y which t h e present tense forms of t h e auxiliary sein 'to be' are deleted. I n German novels Russians would say Ich hungrig ' I a m hungry', Du Deutscher 'You are a German'. 27 Although t h e logicians distinguish a large n u m b e r of different be-operators, there is no need for t h e linguist t o distinguish all of t h e m (cf. K . Berka, "Funkcii glagola ' b y t ' s toöki zrenija sovremennoj formalnoj logiki", in Logiko-grammaticeskie o6erki [Moscow: Vyssaja skola, 1961], 160-180).
56
ALEXANDER V. ISACENKO
In many languages, 'existence' is firmly linked with the verb be, but this is by no means universal. In H-languages existence is often expressed by have, cf. F il y a literally 'there it has'. Among the Slavic languages existence is linked with have in SC ima 'there is' (and nema 'there is not'), B imajnjama; in Polish and Ukrainian only the negative forms show have, cf. P niema, U nemaje. Russian, a B-language, uses 'impersonal' predicatives est and netjnetu which are historically connected with be; est is no longer a finite verb form, but is historically the 3rd person sing, present of byti; netu is a contraction of *ne je tu 'not is there'. In some H-languages have constructions are equivalent to existential constructions with give or be: (19a) (19b) (20a) (20b)
Germ Es gibt (es ist) dort ein Theater 'There is a theater there'. Sie haben dort ein Theater 'They have a theater there'. Cz Je tam novy hotel 'There is a new hotel there'. Maji tam novy hotel 'They have a new hotel there'.
English utilizes both 'be' and 'have' constructions in the 'existential' meaning. The Russian 'possessive' constructions with « + Gen -f- est are usually considered as stylistical doublets of u -f- Gen -f- zero form of byf. Mrazek and Brym point out that in such constructions the "very fact of possession" is stressed by est.18 Hrabe and Adamec consider the "relative stability of the possessive relation" to be one of the factors which condition the choice of est or zero. 29 Without going into details here, we want to show that in certain contexts est and zero constructions are far from being homonymous. 8.1. Compare the following two sentences: (21) (22)
U nego est sedye v61osy 'He has gray hair'. U nego E sedye v61osy 'He has gray hair'.
Note that the English sentence He has gray hair is ambiguous: I t can mean 'He has some gray hair' as in (21), or '(All o f ) his hair is gray' as in (22). Sentences (21) and (22) would be ambiguous in Russian, if used in any other tense than the present, e.g. U nego btfli sedtfe volosy. But in the present the semantic difference is marked 18
R . Mrazek and J. Brym, "Semantika a funkce ruskeho genitivu", 110. V. HrabS and P. Adamec, Transformacni syntax soucasne rustiny (Prague: StAtni pedagogicke nakladatelstvi [mimeographed edition], 1969), 45.
29
ON 'HAVE' AND 'BE' LANGUAGES
57
by the opposition estjzero. The nominative noun phrase in (21) is marked as indefinite or 'partitive', the same noun phrase in (22) has no such mark. The semantic difference becomes even more prominent in the negative: (21a) U nego net sedyx volos 'He has no gray hair'. (22a) U nego ne sedye volosy 'He does not have gray hair'. The indefinite meaning of est appears whenever the 'possessed object' is implemented by a plural form: (U nego est) fal'Hvye zuby 'He has some false teeth', druz'jd v Amerike 'some friends in America', den'gi v bdnke 'some money in the bank', origindl'nye mysli 'some original ideas', etc. In constructions without est indefinite meaning is absent: U negd fal'Hvye zuby is equivalent to 'He wears dentures'. The appearance of quantifiers (mnogo, neskolko, malo, vse; numerals) in the noun phrase effaces the indefinite meaning, cf. U negd mnogo druzejj U nego est mnogo druzej 'He has many friends. The same indefinite meaning is present, if the 'possessed object' is expressed by a singulare tantum: (23) (24)
U nego est starinnyja mebel 'He has (some) antique furniture'. U nego starinnyja mebel 'He has (only) antique furniture'.
I f tolko 'only' is to be used, the construction will have the shape of (24): U nego tolko pervoklassnyj tovdr 'He has only first-class merchandise', and not *U nego est tolko pervoklassnyj tovar. Names of diseases like gripp 'flu' or physical states such as zar 'fever', temperatura 'temperature' are singularia tantum. Therefore the difference between indefinite and non-indefinite meaning can be expressed in the present: (25) (26)
U nego est zar 'He has some fever'. U nego E zar 'He has fever, he is feverish'.
These sentences are correlated with the negative sentences (25a) U nego net zara 'He has no fever'. (26a) U nego E ne zar, on prosto razgorjacilsja 'He does not have fever, he is simply heated up'. 8.2 The opposition of the estjzero constructions is interpreted in a very specific manner if it refers to parts of the wardrobe. Zero constructions refer to the part of wardrobe actually being worn:
58 (27)
A L E X A N D E R Y. ISACENKO
U nee novye botinki 'She has (wears) new shoes'.
On the other hand, est constructions of this type refer to mere 'possession': (28)
U nee est novye botinki, no ona ix ne nosit 'She has new shoes, but does not wear them'. 30
The assumption that u -f- Gen and imet constructions are derived from the same deep structure in no way accounts for the differences between est and zero. Even if it were possible to transform the sentences (21)-(28) without violating Russian 'idomaticity', the semantic differences discussed in 8.1 and 8.2 would be lost. 9. The proper domain of idiomatic imet constructions are sentences of the type 'Personal noun -f- imet -(- Abstract noun'. But even here there are important constraints; not every abstract noun appearing in have constructions in H-languages has its counterpart in Russian. The equivalent of 'I had a dream' is not *Ja imel son, but (29)
U menja byl son.
In much the same way the abstract nouns predcuvstvie 'misgiving', xordSee nastroenie 'good mood', zdorovyj vid 'healthy look', zeludocnoe rasstrojstvo 'indigestion', gore 'sorrow', nescdst'e 'misfortune', stolknovenie s nacatstvom 'confrontation with the authorities' and many others are not optionally convertible into imet constructions. I t is not likely that such constructions should be considered phraseological units. There seems to exist some common semantic denominator which excludes imet constructions in these cases. Unfortunately it is impossible to elaborate on this problem here. Be this as it may, the attempt to reduce all imet and u -)- Gen constructions to a common deep structure and to differentiate them 'by a late rule' proves unsuccessful. I t certainly does not account for the lack of optional convertibility of the sentences quoted above.
50
For a more detailed discussion see A. V. Isaccnko, "Sloveso 'mat' v rustine a 8o s tym súvisí", Ruítina v skole I (1948-1949), 11-34; P. Adamec, "K ekvivalentum sloves 'byti' a 'míti' v rustiné", Rusko-Seské studie, in Sborník Vysoké skoly pedagogické v Praze, Jazyk o literatura (KopeckijFestschrift) I I (1960), 205 ff.
ON 'HAVE' AND 'BE' LANGUAGES
59
10. Let us turn now to Russian imet constructions where the 'possessor' is an inanimate noun: (30)
Kvartira imeet vannuju 'The apartment has a bathroom'.
Gen constructions: Such sen tenses are not convertible into u it is impossible to say *U kvartiry (est) vannaja. If a be construction is to replace a sentence of the type (30), only locative noun phrases can be used: (30a) (30b)
V kvartire est v&nnaja 'In the apartment there isabathroom'. V kvartire E vannaja.
The difference between the last two sentences lies in the use of existential byt in (30a) and of attributive byt in (30b). Here again the assumption of an optional convertibility of have and be constructions in Russian proves wrong. The locative phrase is not a 'Dative' (or beneficiary). On the other hand, not every sentence of the type (30a) can be converted into an imet construction, cf. V sadii est' stdrye derev'ja 'In the garden there are old trees' -»- *Sad imeet stdrye derev'ja. The invariant grammatical meaning of the reflexive morpheme -sja in Russian is the explicit signalization of intransitivity. 31 The addition of -sja to any transitive verb causes the verb to become intransitive: (31a) Knigotorgovec prodaet knigi 'The bookseller sells books' (trans.) (31b) Kniga xoros6 prodaets/a 'The book sells well' (intrans.). Transitive verbs such as kusdt 'bite', derzdt 'hold', varit 'cook' are regularly intransitivized by -sja, cf. Sobdlca kusdetsja 'The dog bites', Krdska derzitsja 'The paint is holding', Sup vdritsja 'the soup is cooking'. If we interpret transitivity as the ability of a verb to take an accusative object, then Russian imet is a transitive verb. 32 Accord-
31
Cf. A. V. Isaienko, OrammatiSeskij stroj russkogo jazyka v sopostavlenii s slovackim I I (Bratislava, 1960), 349-354. 31 E. Benveniste considers the verb have to be a 'pseudo-transitive'. Since have does not refer to a 'process', it does not 'affect' or 'modify' the object et 'avoir' ", 121). Our concept of transitivity is based on a purely formal criterion: the ability of a verb to take an accusative object.
60
A L E X A N D E R V. ISAÖENKO
ingly, imeisja equals imet -f- Intransitive Marker. Since, as we know, imetsja in Russian is synonymous with existential byt, it follows t h a t the relationshaip between existential byt and the verb imet can be reduced to a single grammatical marker: byt is imet minus transitivity. A similar construction is found in Czech. The Czech equivalent of English 'How are you?' is 'Jak se maS/mate?'. I n other words, the reflexive verb mit se (literally 'to have oneself') in one of its usages is equivalent to be. Thus Russian imet and byt constructions can be said to represent two different grammatical solutions, or, if one wishes, two surface structures of one and the same underlying semantic structure which can be implemented either as a transitive or as an intransitive nounverb-noun relation. If N 1 is inanimate, the transitive construction takes the shape of Nom -f imet -)- Acc or Locative -f- bytjimetsja -f- Nom. Both constructions are admitted, if between the first and the second noun there exists a relation of 'spatial inclusion' (N2 is spatially included in N 1 ). Such a relation exists in 'The house has two apartments', 'The apartment has a large bathroom', 'The room has two entrances', etc. The Russian equivalents are V dome (imejutsja) dve kvartiry, V kvartire imeetsja bol'Mja vannaja, V Icomnate (imejutsja) dva vxoda. Constructions with imet are possible, though less 'idiomatic': Dorn imeet dve kvartiry, Kvartira imeet bolSuju vannuju, Komnata imeet dva vxoda. B u t imet constructions are impossible if there is no relation of 'spatial inclusion' between N 1 and N 2 as in (32a) E Germ Cz (32b) R
The house has a garden. Das Haus hat einen Garten. Dum mä zahradu, but *Dom imeet sad.
I t is noteworthy that the Russian equivalents of sentences such as (32a) are implemented by byt constructions in which N 1 is used with the preposition pri semantically marked as 'adessive'. (32c) Pri dome (imeetsja) sad 'Next to the house there is a garden' The impossibility of using the construction u Gen (*U doma estjimeetsja sad) shows t h a t the Russian preposition u no longer has the adessive meaning, if it appears in byt constructions and in topic position [see sentences (4) to (6) in paragraph 3].
ON ' h a v e ' a n d ' b e ' l a n g u a g e s
61
11. Logicians, semanticians and philosophers of language generally assume that there exists a 'logical' relation A has B, implicitly considering this relation to be 'universal'. But, as every linguist should know, 'have' qua lexeme is a rarity among the languages of the world; 'the majority of the languages do not know it'. 33 A has B is a linguistic construction typical for H-languages and is being gradually adopted by some B-languages. The assumption of a 'universal' A has B relation reflects egocentrical thinking of theoreticians biased by their linguistic background. 34 Latin Mihi erat amicus, Hungarian Nelcem volt egy barätom 'To me was one friend of mine', Russian U menjd byl drug 'With respect to me there was a friend' do not contain the slightest trace of a haverelation. The 'dative' constructions of Latin or Hungarian and the the u + Gen construction of Russian are different grammatical devices to signal implication or concern of a person with respect to the validity of a statement. There is not even a hint of 'possessivity' in Russian sentences like (32c). An independent and self-contained sentence such as (33)
Syn üöitsja v Moskve 'The son studies in Moscow.'
may be expanded by an element establishing a specific relation of 'implication' between a speaker and the message conveyed by the sentence: (33a) Syn u menjä üöitsja v Moskve. A similar relation of implication is established in some H-languages by a Äave-construetion, as in English I have a son studying in Moscow, or by a dative, as in Czech Syn mi studuje v Moskve?5 33
E. Benveniste, " 'Etre' et 'avoir' ", 121. It is noteworthy, however, that even Apresjan, a native speaker of Russian, considers imdt 'have' to be an 'elementary semantic feature', a semantic prime — Olksperimentdtnoe issledovanie russkogo glagola (Moscow, 1967), 9. M. Bierwisch posits a general have-relation (X has Y) for German, assuming that this relation includes the relation 'Y is part of X ' — "Eine Hierarchie syntaktisch-semantischer Merkmale", Studia Orammatica V (Berlin, 1966), 29-86. The semantic elusiveness of the relation A has B is discussed (for German nouns denoting body parts) in A. V. Isaöenko, "Das grammatische Verhalten der Bezeichnungen von Körperteilen im Deutschen", Stiulia Grammatica V (Berlin, 1965), 7-28. 35 Cf. R. Mräzek and J. Brym, "Semantika a funkce ruskeho genitivu", 104. 34
62
A L E X A N D E R V. ISACENKO
The same relation of implication can be observed in the following examples, mostly taken from Mrázek and Brym: (34) U bábuski bolít golová 'Grandma has a headache.' (35) U bábuski ubezála kóska 'Grandma is implicated in the fact that the cat ran away.' (36) U bábuSki drozát rúki 'Grandma's hands are trembling.' (37) U bábuski velosipéd v garazé 'Grandma has a/the bicycle in the garage.' (38) U bábuski rodilás' vnúcka 'A granddaughter was born to grandma.' Note t h a t bolít golová, ubezála kóSka, velosipéd E v garazé are wellformed and self-contained sentences which do not require any further specifications. Similarly, Est dén'gi 'There is money' is a well-formed and selfcontained Russian sentence which does not require any further specification. The addition of the implicational prepositional phrase in U menjá est dén'gi is nothing more than an adverbial expansion of the sentence Est dén'gi. Only the existence of parallel imét constructions creates the illusion t h a t U menjá est dén'gi is a special token of the have-relation in Russian. This brings us to the problem of 'possessivity' in general. 12. The Latin grammatical term possessivus was accepted into the grammatical terminology of all European languages; it refers to a class of pronouns, adjectives, adnominal genitive and dative constructions, predicative relations expressed by 'possessive' sentences. For all their inventiveness, contemporary linguists continue to be under the spell of conventional grammatical terms which they tend to hypostatize. The 'possessive relation' is believed to be a linguistic 'universal'. Otherwise Lyons could not have written t h a t "in many, and perhaps in all, languages existential and possessive constructions derive . . . from locatives". 36 Only in a very limited number of usages do 'possessives' really refer to what may be labelled 'possession'. Even my house is not necessarily the house which I possess; my house could be just as well the house I am living in, the house I particularly like, or the house I have in mind. I n what meaningful sense can the sentence We have fair weather today be called possessive? W h a t kind of 'possessivity' is expressed by my 36
"A Note on Possessive, Existential and Locative Sentences", 390.
ON ' h a v e ' a n d
'be'
languages
63
case, my body, my sister, my wife, my contemporary, my age, my impression, my statement, my tailor, my native town Ì An interesting attempt to distinguish, in Russian and Czech, possessive constructions proper and to delimit them from other constructions was undertaken by R . Zimek. 37 Many languages use adnominal genitive and adnominal dative constructions which are called 'possessive'. Thus, in Old Church Slavic the adnominal dative in constructions of the type N 1 + N 2 /dat is optional, if (a) N 1 is a personal noun and N 2 a personal noun referring to kinship, or (b) both nouns are non-personal. Examples for (a): bratb mi 'my brother', synb mi 'my son', otrokb mi 'my child', blizokh mi 'my relative', etc. Examples for (b): solb zemli (Dat) 'salt of the earth', xramb molitvl 'house of prayer', prazdbnikb pasce 'the feast of Easter', vb vèky vekomb 'forever and ever' (lit. 'for ages of ages'). 38 The dative in (b) expresses relations which are clearly different from what is usually called 'possession'. J u s t as the adnominal genitive in Russian problèma snabzénija 'the problem of supply' evidently goes back to the predicative fee-construction Snabzénie E problèma 'supply is a problem', the OCS construction prazdbnikb pasce is a transformed fee-construction pasxa estb prazdbnikb. Neither the 'surface structure', nor any kind of conceivable 'deep structure' contains so much as a hint of a 'possessive' relation. The same is true of the examples quoted under (a). Kinship relations have nothing to do with possession. Note t h a t Russian uses special quasiauxiliary verbs to denote this specific kind of kinship relation: On mne prixóditsja (dovóditsja) dvojurodnym bràtom, Surinom, 'He is my cousin, my brother-in-law'. There is really nothing in the semantics of such sentences which would justify calling constructions like moj dvojurodnyj brat or OCS bratrb mi 'my brother' 'possessive'. Let us consider 'possession' in Hungarian, a typical B-language. What appears to be a 'possessive' suffix in Hungarian is in reality nothing b u t a personal marker which may be added to both nouns or verbs: 37
R . Zimek, " K c h a p à n l posesivnosti", Rusko-ceské studie, Sbornik Vysohé Skoly pedagogické v Praze, Jazyk a literatura (Kopeckij-Festschrift) I I (1960), 131-156. 38 Cf. J . K u r z , Ucebnice jazyka staroslovénského ( P r a g u e , 1969), 208.
64
A L E X A N D E R V. ISACENKO
Personal markers in nouns kép-e-m kép-e-d kép-e-0 kép-ûnk kép-e-tek kép-û-k
'my picture' 'thy picture' 'his picture' 'our picture' 'your picture' 'their picture'
Personal markers in verbs kér-e-m ' I ask' 'thou ask' kér-e-d kér-i-0 'he asks' kér-j-ûk 'we ask' kér-i-tek 'you ask' kér-i-k 'they ask'
There is no special 'possessive' pronoun in Hungarian. I n its most explicit form the construction corresponding to My book is Az en kepem where az is the article, en is ' I ' and kepem, the '1st person singular form' of the noun hep. The very general relation of 'implication' is expressed (redundantly) by two markers (en, -em), b u t 'implication' is not 'possession'. 12.1 Possession proper or 'ownership' is a legal institution appearing in societies after they have reached a certain stage of development. I t is instructive to compare the verbs related to ownership in H-languages with those in B-languages. English to own, Germ besitzen, Czech vlastnit are transitive verbs belonging to the domestic stock of the vocabulary. 39 Russian, a typical B-language, has no domestic transitive verb meaning 'to own, to possess'. The verbs vladet and obladdt used as equivalents of 'possess' mean primarily 'to be master of, to govern', derived from the stem vlad- 'reign'. Both words are borrowings from Slavonian. They govern the instrumental (and not the accusative) and have a variety of meanings which are not covered by MoE own, Germ besitzen, Cz vlastnit, e.g. vladet jazykdm 'know (how to speak) a language' (loan-translation from Germ eine Sprache beherrschen), vladitsoboj 'to control oneself' (Germ sich beherrschen), obladat xaroSim sliixom 'to have a good ear'. 12.2 Constructions such as A owns B may be converted into synonymous constructions B belongs to A. The verbs own and belong may be called conversives. I n H-languages the verbs meaning 'belong' are part of the fundamental domestic vocabulary: MoE belong, 39
MoE own is related to Goth digan 'to own', AS dgan, Germ eigen. Germ besitzen is an old loan-translation from Lat possedere. Polish has adopted Lat possedere to posiadac 'to own', Cz vlastnit 'own' is derived from vlastni 'own, proper (adj.)'.
ON ' H A V E ' A N D ' B E '
LANGUAGES
65
Germ gehören, Cz patfit. But Russian pri-nadlezät is a late borrowing from Slavonian; it is not quoted in Sreznevskij Materialy, including the Dopolnenija. In H-languages, the verbs meaning 'to belong' acquire a variety of secondary meanings not shared by R prinadlezdt: (39) He belongs to the family Germ E r gehört zur Familie Cz P a t f i do rodiny (40) She belongs in the theater Germ Sie gehört ans Theater Cz P a t r ' do divadla (41) This belongs in another chapter Germ Das gehört in ein anderes Kapitel Cz To patri do jine kapitoly
(39a) *On prinadlezit k sem'e (correct: On E ölen sem'i)
(40a) *Ona prinadlezit v teätr (correct: E j by v teatre byf)
(41a) *ßto prinadlezit v drugüju glavü ' ß t o sjudä ne otnositsja').
I t is clear that the relation of 'ownership' and its conversive, the only relation which deserves the name 'possessive', has different implementations in have and be languages. We should be more careful in positing linguistic 'universals' and making far reaching generalizations on the basis of a few trivial examples. Those who are so concerned about linguistic 'universals', i.e. structural features valid in ALL languages of the world, should remember that it is useful to know at least some of them. 13. Be constructions belong to the most elementary syntactic patterns of I E languages. Sentences of the type A is B cannot be further reduced or simplified. Semantically the verb be is the most abstract verb with a large variety of different connotations and functions. Both A and B in be constructions may be implemented by a variety of word classes having a number of different grammatical markers. In some languages have has become a verb nearly as elementary as be. I t has entered various semantic and syntactical relations with be and has eventually become embedded in an intricate network of semantic and syntactical correlations with other verbs which doubt-
66
A L E X A N D E R V. ISAfiENKO
lessly belong to the elementary (abstract) verbs of the language. These facts justify in our view the term 'have languages'. As has been 3hown in (5), imet constructions in Russian first appear in bookish styles and penetrate into the spoken language not before the 19th century. As we have seen, imM entered into a number of syntactical and semantic correlations with different usages of the verb byt, b u t characteristically was not embedded in significant semantic and syntactical correlations with other 'elementary' verbs. This justifies, in our view, our assumption t h a t Russian, although having adopted a number of imet constructions, remains up to this day a typical B-language. Let us consider the pertinent facts. 13.1. There exists in H-languages a very intimate relation between the verbs have and get. I n English, constructions with the present of have are synonymous with constructions using the perfect of get: I have some money/I've got some money. The original meaning of get 'to obtain' is effaced in I've got plenty of time (*I have obtained plenty of time). I n H-languges, verbs meaning 'get, obtain' tend to become correlated with have in a very specific manner: 'get, obtain' is interpreted as an inchoative of have, meaning 'begin to have'. In Russian the verb polucit¡polucat 'to obtain' has no structural similarities with either imet or byt. I t is clearly correlated with 'addressive' verbs such as dat 'give', podarit'give as a gift', posldt 'send', otprdvit 'id.', vruclt 'hand over, present', etc., all of them being combined with a 'dative of the addressee'. I n other words, R J a polucil ot negd desjat rublej 'I got ten roubles from him' refers to the same situation as On dal (poslal, vrucil) mne desjat rublej 'He gave (sent, handed over to) me ten roubles'. This semantic correlation prevails, of course, in English as well. B u t R polucit never is used in constructions where there is no 'donor', cf. (42a) I have an idea I got an idea 'I began to have an idea' (42b) We have a new teacher We got a new teacher 'began to have' Constructions corresponding to (42) are quite normal in other Hlanguages, such as German or Czech: (42c) G Ich habe eine Idee Cz Mam napad
Ich bekam eine Idee Dostal jsem ndpad
ON 'HAVE' AND 'BE' LANGUAGES
67
(42d) G Wir haben einen neuen Lehrer Wir bekamen einen neuen Lehrer Cz Mäme noveho uöitele Dostali jsme noveho ußitele. But in Russian it is impossible to say *Ja polucil ideju, *My polucili novogo ucitelja. In fact, the bundle of semantic features 'begin' + 'have' does not exist in Russian. The Russian equivalents of (42b) would be U nas teper' növyj uciteLi0 13.2. German bekommen, Czech dostat 'get' are used as inchoatives of have with abstract nouns in object position, the presence of a 'donor' being excluded: (43a) Germ Ich habe Angst Cz Mäm strach (43b) Germ Ich habe Hunger Cz Mam hlad
Ich bekam Angst 'I got scared' Dostal jsem strach Ich bekam Hunger 'got hungry' Dostal jsem hlad
In Russian, where there is no *Ja imeju strax, *Ja imeju golod, there is also no *Ja polucil strax, *Ja polucil golod. The inchoative of the Russian be construction Mne E straSno 'I am scared' is implemented by the verb stat'jstanovüsja which is correlated with by( and means 'begin to be': (43c) Mne E straSno Mne stalo sträsno' To me it began to be fearful' I t is noteworthy that English get fulfils a double function: it is used as an inchoative of have (I got a cold 'began to have') and as an inchoative of be (I am scared\I got scared 'began to be'). Diachronically, the semantic affinity between the inchoatives of be and have is documented by the fact that Germanic *bi-queman originally meant 'come to be' (as in MoE become a man), but was reinterpreted in German as 'come to have' (as in Germ einen Brief bekommen). 13.3. In H-languages the verb give is, in one of its usages, closely related to the verb have. In fact, give in H-languages is the causative of have: English It gives me a headache may be analyzed as 'it causes me to have a headache'. H-languages use ^ive-constructions for which there are no direct equivalents in B-languages, cf. 4t
The idiomatic equivalent of (42c) in Russian would be Mne prisld v
gdlovu ideja lit. 'An idea came to my head'.
68
A L E X A N D E R V. ISA^ENKO
(44a) Cz Mam s tym hocLne prace ' I have a lot of work with this.' (44b) To mi da hodne prace 'This gives me a lot of work (causes me to have)/ I n Russian analogical griue-constructions are unthinkable, cf. *JSto -mne daet mndgo vozni, since byt in the underlying construction U menjd s Him E mnogo vozni is not correlated with da£\davat. There exist in Russian numerous more or less idiomatic constructions in which imet and dat are correlated: imetjdatprdvo 'have/give the right', imetj dat slovo 'have/give the floor', etc. B u t there is no correlation between u -f- Gen + byt and datjdavdt in Russian. 13.4. I n H-languages the verbs get and give can be analyzed as different modifications of have ('begin to have' vs. 'cause to have'). This makes get and give conversives in H-languages, cf. I got a shot/ They gave me a shot. This semantic correlation of get and give is typical for H-languages: 45a) Germ Cz (45b) Germ Cz
Ich bekam eine Injektion Dostal jsem injekci Man gab mir eine Injektion Dali mi injekci
' I got a shot' 'They gave me a shot'
The absence of the verb have in the central sphere of Russian syntax precludes the possibility of correlating get and give unless the object is a physical one. This is why we do not find either *Ja polucil ukol ' I got a shot', or *Mne dali ukol 'They gave me a shot' in Russian. The causative construction uses the verb sdelat 'to make' which can be analyzed into 'cause to be' as in Ego sdelali sekretarem 'They made him (caused him to be) a secretary'. Accordingly, the Russian equivalent of (45b) is (45c) Mne sdelali ukol 'They made me a shot'. The semantic relation between sdelat and byt becomes manifest if the verb appears with the intransitive marker -sja. Transitive sdelat + sja mean 'to become' = 'to begin to be' as in On sdelalsja sekretarem 'He became a secretary'. Thus sdelatsja is synonymous with stat, see sentence (43c). The inchoatives sdelatsja and stat (and their imperfective equivalents) are correlated with u + Gen + byt constructions; in H-languages we find in comparable sentences the correlation between 'get' and 'have':
ON 'HAVE' A N D 'BE' LANGUAGES
(46a) Germ Cz (47a) Germ Cz
69
E r hat einen Anfall (46b) R U negò E pripàdok Ma zàchvat 'He is having an attack' E r bekam einen Anfall (47b) R S nim sdélalsja pripàdok Dostal zàchvat 'He got an attack'
13.4. In the majority of get and give constructions, Czech and Slovak, as a rule, follow German. B u t having become typical H-languages, Czech and Slovak have developed give constructions unparallelled in other H-languages. When studying the menu in a restaurant, a husband may ask his wife 'What shall we have?'. The equivalent question in Czech uses give : (48)
Cz ,Co si dàme? 'What shall we give to ourselves?'
Since dàt 'give' in Czech is equivalent to 'cause to have', the following sentences are almost synonymous: (49) (50)
Dali jsme si gulàs a pivo 'We had ourselves goulash and a beer. ' Mèli jsme gulàs a pivo 'We had goulash and a beer.'
Note t h a t 'have' in (50) has nothing to do with 'possession'. The Russian equivalent of (49) is a u + Oen + byt construction: (49a) R U nas byl guljàs i pivo. Constructions parallel to Czech (49) (*My sebe dali . . .) are unthinkable in Russian. 14.1. The verb have may be used with reference to the opposite of 'possession'. When complaining about high living costs, a Czech housewife may say: 'You buy some butter, eggs, meat and fruits and right away you have a hundred (crowns)': (51)
Koupis màslo, vejce, maso a ovoce a hned mdS stovku.
Accumulating spendings is not accumulating 'possessions', and yet a H-language uses the verb have. Far from even hinting at anything like 'possession', Aewe-constructions boil down to òe-constructions with the person implicated standing as the subject of the sentence. 15. In H-languages the verb have has the tendency to become 'grammaticalized', i.e. to serve as a modal modifier of other verbs. There are numerous instances of this development.
70
A L E X A N D E R V. ISACENKO
15.1. H-languages use the verb have in negative sentences with pronouns (or pronominal adverbs) and the infinitive. In analogical constructions Russian uses the verb be: (52) (53)
(54)
He had nothing to say (52a) R Emú nécego bylo skazát Cz Nemël co ríci He had nobody to consult (53a) Emú né s kem bylo posovéto vaisja Cz Nemël se s kym poradit He had nowhere to go (54a) Emú nékuda bylo idtí Cz NemeZ kam jit
In this sentence pattern there is a one-to-one correspondence between have in H-languages and 'be' in Russian. 15.2. H-languages use the verb have + Infinitive to express necessity: (55a) You have to answer (55c) Cz Más odpovídat
(55b) Germ Du hast zu antworten (55d) Slk Más odpovedat
The modality expressed by this construction differs slightly from language to language. In English it may be equivalent to 'must', in German it may express in some contexts 'inevitable future'. In French we find the construction we + avoir que infinitive meaning 'need': (55e) Il n'a qu'à répondre 'He has only to answer'. In Czech and Slovak the verbs mitijmat 'have' correspond to German sollen: Cz NemáS koufit, Slk NemáS fajcit, Germ Du sollst nicht rauchen mean 'You should not smoke'. Czech and Slovak share with German the usage of have + infinitive to signal a 'reported event': (56a) Germ Der Verfasser soli ein Mônch gewesen sein 'The author is said to have been a monk' (56b) Cz Autorem mil byt mnich. Russian constructions with imét + Infinitive with the meaning of 'certain future' are rare, obsolete and have a distinctly clerical flavor: SoóbScénie iméet pojaviísja v gazétax 'The information is to appear in the papers'. Constructions of this type are restricted to a few verbs only. Neither in good fiction nor in colloquial Russian
ON ' h a v e ' a n d ' b e ' l a n g u a g e s
71
would one find im&t in combination with verbs such as kupit 'to b u y ' , vtflcupafsja
'to t a k e a bath', or umeret
'to die' (cf. *0n
imeet
umerdf 'He is to die').
Modal verbs belong to the innermost layer of the vocabulary of a language. H-languages have incorporated the verb have into their system of modal verbs. In Russian the constructions with ime( -)Infinitive are an 'altogether foreign element'.41 They are loan-translations from German and have not been internalized in the language. 15.3. In H-languages constructions with have + Infinitive may lose their modal character and become grammatical markers of the future. This happened in the majority of Romance languages, where Low Latin cantare habeo yielded, as in French, the future form je chanterai. A similar process took place in East Slavic. In East Slavic we find from the 11th to the 16th century two constructions corresponding to Low Latin cantare habeo : (a) imamblimeju + Infinitive (perfective or imperfective); (b) imu + Infinitive (only imperfective). It seems almost incredible that not a single Russian or Ukrainian investigator ever noticed that these two constructions had very distinct functions and referred to quite different situations.42 Furthermore, the two constructions belong to two different linguistic layers. It is the great merit of the young Czech linguist Helena Kfizkova to have given the first adequate and exhaustive analysis of these constructions in East Slavic.43 41
'polnostju prislyj element', S. P. Obnorskij, Ocerki po morfologii russkogo glagola (Moscow, 1953), 161. 42 Cf. I. I. Sreznevskij, Materialy dlja slovarja drevnerusskogo jazyka I (St. Petersburg, 1893), s.v. imiti. — P. Lavrovskij, 0 jazyke severnyx russkix letopisej (St. Petersburg, 1852), 89. — F. I. Buslaev, Istoriieskaja grammatika russkogo jazyka (Moscow, 1881), 211-212. — A. I. Sobolevskij, Lekcii po istorii russkogo jazyka (4th ed.; Moscow, 1907), 237. — A. Kryms'kyj, Narysy z istorii ukrains'koi movy (Kiev, 1922), 104. — N. Durnovo, OSerk istorii russkogo jazyka (Moscow, 1924), 235. — L. P. Jakubinskij, Istorija drevnerusskogo jazyka (Moscow, 1953), 237-238. — T. P. Lomtev, Oierki po istoriSeskomu sintaksisu russkogo jazyka (Moscow, 1956), 65. — V . I. Borkovskij and P. S. Kuznecov, IstoriSeskaja grammatika russkogo jazyka (Moscow, 1963), 261-262. 43 Helena Kfizkova, "Vyvoj opisneho futura v jazycich slovanskych, zvlAst§ v rustinS", Acta Universitatis Palackianae Olomucensis, Facultas Philosophica 4, L, Philologica II (Prague, 1960).
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A L E X A N D E R V. ISACENKO
According to H. Krízková, construction (a) originally had various modal meanings ranging from necessity to inevitability, where it becomes difficult to distinguish it from genuine future. Construction (a) occurs exclusively in Slavonian texts, including the Chronicles, and is totally unknown to the vernacular in the northeast of the East Slavic territory. Being a Slavonism, imamb + Infinitive usually renders Greek constructions with e%eiv 'have', 44 b u t occasionally translates other Greek constructions as well. Legal documents of the northeastern ('Great Russian') area never use constructions of the type (a), but in documents written on the territory of present-day Ukraine and Belorussia, constructions with iméjujimajujmaju -f- Infinitive are not infrequent, 45 showing the progressive proliferation of have in Ukrainian and Belorussian. I n these texts the constructions have still a modal meaning: majutb davaty 'they should give' (1593).46 I n contradistinction to (a), the constructions with imu + Infinitive have originally the 'phasal' meaning 'to begin to', similarly as the constructions with na-, u-, po-cnú -f Inf. Constructions of the type (b) do not occur in Slavonian texts; their domain is the legal documents which reflect the vernacular. 47 They also occur in those passages of the Chronicles which reflect the spoken language, e.g. pogani imutb radovati sja 'the pagans will begin to rejoice' in the Primary Chronicle. During the 16th century imu -f- Inf. constructions begin to become rare until they are replaced b y constructions with stánu and eventually by budu -(- Inf. Imu + Inf. still survives in northern Russian dialects (Novgorod, Kostroma, Jaroslavl, Vologda, etc.), but the actual meaning of this periphrastic form remains unclear. 48 On the other hand, constructions of the type (b) survived in Ukrainian and partly in the Belorussian area. According to Ukrai44
See H. Birnbaum, "Zum analytischen Ausdruck der Zukunft im Altkirchenslavischen", ZfslPh 25 (1956), 1-7; H. Birnbaum, "Zum periphrastischen Futurum im Gotischen und Altkirchenslavischen", Byzantinoslavica 18 (1957), 77-81. H. Birnbaum, Untersuchungen zu den Zukunftsumschreibungen mit dem Infinitiv im Altkirchenslavischen: Ein Beitrag zur historischen Verbalsyntax des Slavischen (Stockholm, 1958), 61-129 and 213-220. 45 H. Kfííková, "Vyvoj opisného futura", 118-119. 48 Ibid., 119. 47 Ibid., 127. 48 Ibid., 136. See also G. Wytrzens, "Zur Frage des periphrastischen Futurums im Russischen", Wiener slavistisches Jahrbuch III (1953), 21 ff.
ON 'HAVE' AND 'BE' LANGUAGES
73
nian grammarians, robytymu (= robyty + imu) does not differ semantically from budu robyty 'I shall work'. The contracted forms do not appear before the first half of the 15th century. 49 Under the influence of Polish, which very early begins to incorporate Mve-construetions, Ukrainian and Belorussian are becoming H-languages. The close genetic relationship between Ukrainian and Belorussian, on the one hand, and Russian, on the other, did not prevent the former from becoming typologically very different from the latter. 15.4. H-languages regularly develop periphrastic past tenses in which have functions as an 'auxiliary'. The replacement in Latin of mihi est aliquid by habeo aliquam rem permitted the introduction of constructions like habeo opus factum ' I have the work done'. In Romance languages habeo -f- past participle yielded a paradigmatic form, cf. French j'ai fait 'I have done'. 50 According to Benveniste, the transitive perfect in Germanic is an autonomous development which is independent from Latin. 51 I t exists in Gothic and Old Icelandic and is reflected by MoE I have forgotten, Germ Ich habe vergessen,52 This development is repeated in such Slavic H-languages as Czech and Slovak. There exist in both languages very productive constructions consisting of have + accusative noun perfective past participle. This pattern is rapidly spreading in the colloquial varieties; in Slovak they are already considered 'literary', in Czech they still seem to be substandard: (57) (58) (59)
Slk Mám polievku uvarenú 'I have the soup cooked'. Mám peniaze odlozené ' I have the money p u t aside'. Más to tu napísané 'You have it written here'.
Pauliny considers these forms ('stative perfect') to belong to the *' 40
H . Krízková, " V y v o j opisného futura", 131.
R e f l e x i v e verbs as well as certain verbs of m o t i o n f o r m t h e periphrastic perfect b y m e a n s of t h e auxiliary être 'be', e.g. je me suis fait, je suis allé. 51 E . B e n v e n i s t e , " 'Être' et 'avoir' ", 134. 52 I n German, t h e periphrastic perfect is formed w i t h t h e auxiliary sein 'be', if t h e verb is intransitive and h a s the general m e a n i n g of a 'directional process' ('gerichteter Vorgang'), e.g. ich bin gekommen, gegangen, gefahren, ich bin aufgestanden, eingeschlafen, aufgewacht, etc. Cf. W . Steinitz, "Die Erforschung der deutschen Sprache der Gegenwart", Wissenschaftliche Annalen I, 8 (Berlin: Akademie-Verlag, N o v e m b e r 1952), 496.
74
ALEXANDER V. ISAÖENKO
paradigm of the perfective Slovak verb, 53 but the newest edition of the Slovak Academy Grammar does not consider them to be special temporal forms. 54 The sentences quoted are semantically distinct from the preterite constructions: Uvaril som polievku, Odlozil som peniaze in very much the same way, as English 'I have the soup cooked' differs from 'I have cooked the soup'. 55 In Russian there are, of course, no comparable im£t constructions (*Ja imeju sup svdrennyj), but the perfective past (passive) participle is embedded into a u -f Gen -f byt construction: (57a) U menjä sup E svären. (58a) U menjä den'gi E otlözeny. In Russian dialects we find constructions such as U menjä E xözeno 'I have walked (much)' where the 'impersonal' form is used and the verb is intransitive and imperfective. One of the main characteristics of B-languages is the fact that they do not make use of the 'auxiliary' verb have. 16. The proliferation of have constructions in a language seems to trigger substantial changes in the system of other auxiliaries. Along with be and have, English has not only preserved the Germanic preterite-presents can, may, must, but developed some new modal auxiliaries such as ought to and need. German uses the modal auxiliaries können, mögen, dürfen, müssen, sollen. In French where etre and avoir are the central auxiliaries, we find the verbs devoir 'must', pouvoir 'can', savoir 'know, be able to' and the verbs faire 'make' and laisser 'let' which behave very much like auxiliaries. Certain modal relations are expressed by constructions with avoir, e.g. French j'ai besoin 'I need'. Russian, on the other hand, inherited from Common Slavic the modal verbs mogü 'I can' and xocü 'I want to'. All other modal relations are expressed either by adjectival be constructions (Ja E dolzen 'I must'), or by dative constructions with special indeclinables called predicatives (of nominal origin): Mne E nado 'I need', Mne E niizno 'id.', Mne E mozno 'I may', Mne E neizjä 'I may not', 63
E. Pauliny, Slovenski ¿asovanie (Bratislava, 1949), 55. Cf. J. Ruäiöka, ed., Morfolögia slovenskiho jazyka (Bratislava, 1966), 501. 56 Cf. the sentence I have the work done as opposed to I have done the work, or the ambiguous sentence I had a book stolen, quoted by N. Chomsky, Aspects of the Theory of Syntax (Cambridge: M. I. T. Press, 1965), 22. 54
ON 'HAVE' A N D 'BE' LANGUAGES
75
Mne E dólzno ' I must', etc. 56 Analogical fee-constructions occur also in Hungarian, another typical B-language: nekem lehet E 'to me possible (is)', nekem, szabad E 'to me permitted (is)'. Even the form muszáj borrowed from German müssen (or rather er muß 'he must') is not a verb, b u t a modal predicative used in dative be-constructions: nekem muszáj E 'to me (it is a) must'. Could it be sheer coincidence that those Slavic languages which have become H-languages since the Middle Ages (Czech, Slovak, Serbo-Croatian) and those which are on the verge of becoming H-languages (Polish, Ukrainian, Belorussian) have some modal verbs which are unknown to Russian, a B-language ? German muß 'must' was borrowed into Czech (musim), Slovak (muslm), Polish (musz$) and penetrated through Polish into Ukrainian (muSu) and Belorussian (musió). Upper Sorbian has the modal verb dyrbjeé 'to have to' borrowed from OHG durfan (Germ dürfen) and attested also in Old Czech. Czech and Slovak have transformed the Common Slavic verb *sméti 'to dare' into a modal auxiliary Cz smlm, Slk smiem 'I may'. In Serbo-Croatian we find not only mdci/mogu 'I can', b u t also mórati¡mdrüm ' I must', etc. What is more, nominal modal expressions (case forms of nouns, prepositional phrases) tend to become modal verbs in Slavic H-languages. Thus Czech he and nelze (originally a Loc. sing, of the noun Ibza) add in the past tense the verbal past neuter singular marker -lo in Izelo and nelzelo; these forms are no longer considered standard, but they still occurred in 20th century clerical Czech and are widespread in substandard and dialects. The predicative expression treba (originally a Nom. sing, fem. noun) used in the present without a present be form in Slovak takes the verbal marker -lo in the past tense: trebalo, a form which is known to many dialects. In Serbo-Croatian the noun Hreba 'sacrifice' was interpreted as an 'impersonal' verb with the 3rd person sing, form treba 'it is necessary' and the perfect trebalo je 'it was necessary'. In colloquial speech the original construction treba mi knjiga is changed into,?"« trebam knjigu ' I need a book' and thus 56
Cf. A. V. Isaöenko, Grammaticeskij stroj russkogo jazyka v sopostavlenii s slovackim (2nd ed.; Bratislava, 1965), 278-292. — A. V. Isaöenko, "O vozniknovenii i razvitii 'kategorii sostojanija' v slavjanskix jazykax", Voprosy jazykoznanija 6, 1955, 48-65. See also H. Birnbaum, Studies on Predication in Russian, I. Predicative Gase, Short Form Adjectives and Predicatives, (Memorandum RM-3774-PR, Santa Monica: The Rand Corporation, January 1964).
76
A L E X A N D E R V. ISACENKO
secondary transitivity was attached to the modal expression (cf. R mne nuzno knigu 'I need a book'). The attitude of Bulgarian and Macedonian towards the havejbe dichotomy has not been treated here, since the pertinent facts can be best treated in a wider framework of Balkan areal linguistics. 17. In the preceding paragraphs we have tried to show the profound structural differences existing between languages in which 'have' as a lexeme has been fully internalized and those languages in which this lexeme either does not exist at all, or is restricted only to certain layers of the more bookish syntax. In languages of the first type, the verb have enters into various syntactic and semantic relations with such fundamental verbs as get or give and is utilized in a variety of constructions which cannot be simply identified as 'possessive'. Furthermore, in these languages have penetrates into the grammatical system and becomes a formal marker of tense forms and of different modalities. I n languages such as Russian, the late penetration of have did not have any noticeable effect on the overall semantic structure and did not affect the morphology of the verb. In one of his brilliant papers on metalinguistic problems, B. L. Whorf has demonstrated t h a t the typically Western (or 'mechanical') approach to reality was due to a great extent to the Western Indo-European syntactic sentence pattern consisting of Actor + Action-f-Goal, which he called Standard Average European, with the 'possible (but doubtful) exception of Balto-Slavic'. 57 Whorf pointed out t h a t "English pattern treats 'I hold it' exactly like 'I strike it', ' I tear it' . . . . Yet 'hold' in plain fact is no action, but a state of relative positions". 58 We know t h a t the lexeme have developed in I E from verbs meaning 'hold', 'grasp' (2); the meaning of have is more abstract than t h a t of 'hold'; have no longer expresses a state of relative positions in space, in fact, its general meaning can be analyzed as be Transitivity (10.1). The lexeme have was made to fit into the overall Western Indo-European pattern of transitive constructions of the type A Xes B. One of the purposes of our investigation was to show t h a t 'Balto" B. L. Whorf, Language, Thought and Reality (Cambridge: M. I. T. Press, 1956), 138. 58 Ibid., p. 262.
ON 'HAVE' AND 'BE' LANGUAGES
77
Slavic' by no means represents a uniform group of languages with respect to the usage of have and be constructions. Within Baltic, Lithuanian became a H-language, while Latvian remained a B-language. Within Slavic, only Russian preserved its status as a typical B-language in spite of the fact t h a t it introduced (at a late date) more or less bookish have constructions. On the other hand, Czech and Slovak became typical H-languages, pushing have constructions even farther than the Romance and Germanic languages. Thus, in Czech, one uses have constructions with prepositional phrases, e.g. Mam po zkouSce, literally ' I have after the examination' equivalent to German Ich ha.be die Prilfung hinter mir 'I have the examination behind me'. Thus Czech and Slovak, and, to a large extent SerboCroatian, Polish and Ukrainian belong clearly to the "Western" syntactic type, while Russian remains archaic (in more than one respect) and is only superficially affected by Western syntax. I t has been stressed t h a t have as a lexeme is extremely rare among the languages of the world. The relations A has B is limited only to a few H-languages. Semanticians, logicians and philosophers of language should try to liberate themselves from their linguistic 'egocentrism' and cease to assume that whatever occurs in Western European syntax must be eo ipso 'universal'. The 'Gesamtbedeutung' of have is too abstract to justify its identification with 'possession'. I t seems advisable not to operate with terms such as 'possession' or 'possessive' in general semantics, because such terms, not having any linguistically based correlates, obscure more than they reveal. University of California, Los Angeles
A PROBLEM IN THE ANALYSIS OF SOME VOWEL ~ ZERO ALTERNATIONS I N MODERN RUSSIAN T H E O D O R E M. L I G H T N E R
I assume that the underlying representations of the roots in forms like PES (gen. PSA) and MOX (gen. either MXA or MOXA) contain the lax vowels i and u: pis and mux, resp.1 In §§ 1-3 a set of rules is given to govern the dropping and lowering of these lax, high vowels; the problem which this paper poses (§§ 4—5) concerns the formulation of a rule to govern the dropping and lowering of lax, high vowels in prefixes (OTO- ~ OT- from otu-, and so on). A few examples of underlying representations and the representations which must be derived from them are given below: underlying
derived
orthographic
representation
nom.
pis-\-u
pes2
gen.
sg. PES sg. PSA
representation
pis-\-a
psd
nom.
sg. PESIK
pis-\-lk-\-u
pesik
gen.
sg. PESIKA
pis-\-ik-\~a
pesika
n. s. (PERE-)SEJEK
Mj+uk+u
Sejok
g. s. -SEJKA
$ej-\-uk-\-a
Sejka
n. s. - g E J E C E K
Mj+uc+ik-\-v?
Sejocek
1 The analyses proposed here are purely synchronic, although t h e underlying representations obviously reflect earlier historical stages of Russian; discussion, see Lightner (1966). The observation t h a t underlying representations are particularly resistant t o change and t h a t t h e rules which deriva phonetic representations reflect historical sound changes is b y no m e a n s a new one (cf. op. cit., p. 24 f n . 39). 1 To derive t h e phonetic representation [p'os], a rule of consonant palatalization and a rule backing e t o o m u s t be applied. I shall not be concerned with these rules in this paper; discussion, see Lightner (1969). * The suffix represented here as u6 is, of course, t h e same suffix represented as uk in - S i J E K , - S f i j K A . A rule which derives palatals f r o m underlying velars before f r o n t vowels is responsible for this shift of uk to u(; discussion, see Lightner (1969).
'VOWEL-ZERO' ALTERNATIONS IN MODERN RUSSIAN
Sej uc-\- ik-\-a zid-\-6-\-t bir-\-e-\-t
g. 8- - S E J E C K A 3 sg. pres 2 D E T 4 3 sg. pres. B E R E T
79
Sejocka Met beret
§1. ANALYSIS I
Disregarding, for t h e moment, t h e problem of stress shift (pis-\-u pis-\-u etc.), we can propose the following three rules: 5 •(LOWER)! *(LOWER) 2 *(DROP)
{6, e} _C{u, i}, where C repre{o, e} I sents any number of non-vowels {u, i} — 0, where 0 represents "zero"
{u, i} i}
A few derivations:
und. repr: * (LOWER )x: *(LOWER) 2 : *(DROP): derived repr:
PESIKA
-SEJEOEK
pis-\-ik-\-a e
Sej -\-uc-\-ik-\-u o
pesika
e
Sejocek
There are other VOWEL ~ ZERO alternations which suggest t h e possibility of proposing a general ( = language-independent) constraint t h a t STRESSED VOWELS MAY NOT BE DROPPED. Thus one finds stressed i alternating with zero in infinitives (VEZTl b u t LiJZT') and stressed i alternating with zero in imperatives (GOVORl b u t GOTOV'). Again, one finds the root vowel in MOX dropped
1
Note that the root in this form must contain a vowel in order to account for the root vowel which appears phonetically in clearly related forms like 02JDAT'. Cf. also fn. 8 below. 4 An asterisk is prefixed to the rules given below to indicate that these rules are not yet correctly formulated; a revised version of the rules is presented in §2 below. There are a number of forms which lie outside the application of these rules and which I shall not treat here: LOB (gen. LB A) but LOBASTYJ for expected *LBASTYJ; IGRA (gen. pi. IGR) but IGORKA for expected *IGRKA; SLU2BA (cf. SLU2SBNYJ), but gen. pi. SLUZB for expected
*SLU2EB, and so on.
80
T H E O D O R E M.
LIGHTNER
when unstressed (gen. MXA) but retained when stressed (MÓXA). 6 Adopting the convention t h a t stressed vowels may not be dropped permits the formulation of a word-final «-dropping rule with no mention of stress: I N I M P E R A T I V E S A N D I N F I N I T I V E S W O R D - F I N A L I D R O P S (another restriction regarding consonant clusters is necessary to account for forms like P R Y G N I , b u t this has nothing to do with stress). The proposed convention will automatically block the application of this rule to forms like VEZTÌ and GOVORÌ. §2. ANALYSIS II
Given the above three rules governing u and i, we see t h a t the convention proposed for stressed vowels plays no role in the derivation of the synonymous genitive singular forms MXA — MÓXA: the rule which lowers stressed û, I ensures that underlying mûx-\-a will be realized as móx-\-a, regardless of whether one adopts the proposed convention or not. In order to make full use of this convention, therefore, let us revise the rules so t h a t the dropping of u, i takes place before the lowering of u, i; this ordering will permit us to dispense altogether with the rule t h a t lowers stressed û , î : (DROP) (LOWER)
{u, i} 0 except / {u, i} — {o, e}
C{u, i}
The derivation of the two genitive forms of MOX is now as follows: underlying representation: (DROP): (LOWER): derived representation:
mûx-\-a
mux-\-â
0 Ó móxa
mxâ
If we consider now the two nominative forms of MOX (i.e., and mûx-\-u), it is obvious t h a t under the present analysis
mux-\-û
6
The two declensions of MOX could, of course, be handled by assuming the roots mux with end-stress and mox with root-stress. But such an analysis requires two underlying distinctions between the roots (difference in vowel quality and difference in stress pattern), whereas the analysis proposed below requires only one distinction between the roots (difference in stress pattern).
'VOWEL-ZERO' ALTERNATIONS IN MODERN RUSSIAN
81
the end-stress form will result in *moxo rather than the correct mox. We must, therefore, include a stress-retraction rule to derive mux-\-u from mux-\-'d. Professor IsaiSenko has called my attention to the fact that a similar phenomenon occurs in imperatives of verbs like PIT', S l T \ BIT', etc. These verbs (except for BRIT') all have end-stress throughout the present: P'JtT, P'JES', P'JET, etc. But in the imperative, the root is stressed (PEJ). The present tense forms are regular (thus pij-{-6-{-t results correctly in pj6t, phonetically [p'j6t] — cf. fn. 2 above). But verbs with end-stress throughout the present normally have end-stress in the imperative (VEDT?, VEDEg', VEDET, . . . VEDi; KLADtJ, KLADES', KLADET KLADi, etc.). One expects, therefore, to find end-stressed pij+i as the underlying representation of imperative P E J ; the representation pij-\-i, however, results in * p j i (phonetically *[p'ji]). As mentioned above, ALL the PIT'-type verbs have imperative in - E J rather than in * - J l . It seems necessary, then, to include in the grammar a stress-retraction rule to account for such end-stressed forms. Throughout the rest of this paper, I assume the application of such a rule to derive forms like m"iix-\-u from mux-\-u and pij-\-i from pij-{-iP More discussion, see Lightner (1972), pp. 390 ff. §3. T H E T R E A T M E N T OF V E R B S L I K E BRAT', ZVAT'
Comparison of the relatively few verbs like BRAT' (3 sg. BERET, root bir), ZVAT' (3 sg. ZOVET, root zuv) with verbs like 2DAT' (3 sg. 2DET, root zid), LGAT' (3 sg. LZET, root lug) 6 reveals that the present tense forms of one set of verbs must be considered exceptional regardless of how one handles the vowels u, i. Under the analysis proposed in § 2 above, the verbs with underlying u, i lowered to e, o (BERET, 2lYET, etc.) are the irregular ones: underlying
representation: (DROP): (LOWER):
derived representation:
zid-j-e^-t 0
bir-j-e-j-t 0
Met
*bret
See Coats (1970a) for a detailed discussion of this rule. The root here must contain the high, lax vowel u in order to account for the root vowel which appears phonetically in clearly related forms like inf. O B L F G A T ' , nom. sg. L 0 2 ' (cf. gen. h Z l with the expected absence of the root vowel), and so on. 7 8
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These forms will be handled b y idiosyncratically specifying roots like bir, zuv, dir as —(DROP) in present tense forms. Regular roots like zid, Sir, ruv, tuk will redundantly be marked + (DROP).9 I am indebted to Professor Taranovsky for bringing to m y attention the fact that the taboo verb SRAT' has alternant present tense forms (SRËT ~ S E R Ë T ) ; those speakers who have only S E R Ë T use the irregular ( = specified —DROP) root sir ; those speakers who have only S R Ë T use the regular ( = specified -(-DROP) root sir ; and those speakers who have S R Ë T — S E R Ë T in free variation use the root sir optionally specified either -(-DROP or — D R O P . Professor Isaëenko has observed that taboo forms often display such variation ; compare, for example, the well-known doublet ET' ~ ETÎ. 1 0 Returning now to Z D Ë T and B E R Ë T , w e have the following derivations: underlying representations:
zid-\-é-\-t + DROP
(DROP): (LOWER): derived representations:
bir-\-é-\-t —DROP
0 zdét
e berét
Henceforth, the feature specification -(-DROP will be suppressed in order to lighten the reader's task in following the derivations.
' See Lightner (1972) for a formal procedure to mark exceptions to a rule n as —BTJLB n and to mark the regular forms -(-RULE n. Further discussion of the treatment of exceptions in phonology, see Coats (1970b) and Kisseberth (1970). 10 Trubetzkoy (1934), p. 67 fn. 42, remarks about this pair that "Der Inf. jiti (ETI) 'futuere' wird nur in gewissen festgeprägten Schimpfformeln gebraucht; in normaler infinitivischer Funktion gebraucht man nur jet (ET'). Übrigens, ist dies ein typisches 'Tabu-Wort'." Phonologically, the alternation ETI ~ ET' is obviously dependent on the position of stress, root-stress resulting in ET', infinitive-ending-stress resulting in E T l (cf. the brief discussion given in §1 above). I t is interesting to note that regardless of where the stress falls, both forms must be considered irregular because the root final b drops before t of the infinitive ending; in Russian, 6 assibilates in this position, as can be seen from infinitives like GREiSTI (root greb-), SKRESTI (root skreb-). The forms ETI ~ ET' are apparently relics of an earlier Slavic period when only dentals assibilated before t; cf. OCS vesti (3 pi. vedgtu), plesti (3 pi. pletqtu) etc, but teti (3 pi. tepgtu), greti (3 pi. grebgtu) etc. More discussion, see Lightner (1972).
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§4. T H E TREATMENT OF P R E F I X A L u, i
For a number of reasons it is necessary to separate a prefix from what follows by a symbol which corresponds roughly to a wordboundary: (1) prefixal final vowels do not drop before a vowel (NA-UK, PERE-0-XLA2DENIE, etc.), (2) prefixal final u does not shift to w before a vowel (PODYGRAT' from podu^igr-, cf. /GRAT'), (3) Slavic roots with initial e have a prothetic glide j (EXAT' [jexa^] from # e x a t # ) ; prothesis does not occur before morpheme boundary (thus # n e s + e - ) - t u # #nes-f-je+tu4£); but prothesis does occur between prefix and root initial e, just as if this e were word-initial (DOEXAT' [dajexa^] from ^ d o ^ e x a t ^ ) The behavior of prefixal u, i is, in part, dependent on the presence Prefixal u, i's display a fair amount of this boundary symbol of idiosyncracy, u but the general patterns seem to be as follows: (1)
prefixal u, i is always dropped before another prefix: POD-S-KAZAT' from p o d u # s u # . . . RAS-S-PROSIT' from razu#su# ...
(2)
prefixal u, i is always dropped before a root which does not contain u, i: 12 V-PISAT' from vu#pis . . . S-VOROTIT' from su#vort. . . Y-BIRAT' from vuQbir . . . (the underlying root here is bir with lax i; cf. fn. 4 above).
(3)
prefixal u, i is always dropped before a root containing u, i which is not dropped: POD-BERET from podu^bir+6+t (bir is specified —DROP here) RAZ-2EG from razu^zig-^-l-^-u otu#pij+i OT-Pi3J from OT-MOET from otu#muj+e+t
11
Prepositions are in principle handled like prefixes but there is even greater idiosyncracy here, and I shall not discuss this difficult problem in this paper. 12 VOPIT' (3 pi. VOPJAT) 'to howl, wail' is from the root vop and does not have a prefix (cf. VOPL' 'howl, wail').
84 (4)
THEODORE M. LIGHTNER
préfixai u, i is lowered ONLY in one position: when followed b y a root containing u, i which is to be dropped. From the first three roots given in (3) above, for example, are formed PODO-BRAT' from podu#bir+â+t RAZO-ZGLA from razu#zig+l+â OTO-P'JËT from otu^pij+é+tu note also PODO-ZDËT from podu#zid+ê+tu
Since there are many environments in which préfixai u, i's are dropped and only one environment in which they are lowered, let us t r y to handle these préfixai VOWEL ~ ZERO alternations in the following manner: a special rule first lowers préfixai u, i ; all préfixai u, i which are not lowered by this rule are then dropped by rule (DROP). The problem is to find the proper environment for the prefix-lowering rule. Since préfixai u, i are lowered only before a root containing u, i, the environment must at least be
j ^ j . Also included in
this environment, however, must be the fact t h a t the u, i in the root must drop. Since u, i drop before a syllable containing any vowel except u, i, the environment must be expanded to ful # C 7}C J , where J = any vowel except u, i. This formulation is still not satisfactory, however, because stressed ii, i do not drop (the stressed u, i in olu^muj+e+£ and otu^pij-^i, e.g., are lowered giving OTM&TET and OTPfiJ, resp.). Thus the environu, i ment must be restricted to C J . B u t still the -stress environment is not exactly correct because it does not handle cases like P O D - B E R ^ T from p o d u #
+ In this form, the —DROP root vowel is lowered because the root is idiosyncratically specified as an exception to rule (DROP); compare PODO-ZDET from ikzid podu where the root vowel is (regularly) dropped -(-DROP and the prefixal u is consequently lowered. Since the prefix-lowering rule must be formulated so t h a t the u in podu is lowered before the root _ _ __ but not before „ „ „ „ the environment for this +JJROP —DrvUJr
'VOWEL-ZERO' ALTERNATIONS I N MODERN RUSSIAN
85
rule must make reference to the feature ± D R O P ; the rule must be formulated as follows: (prefix-LOWER) {u, i} -> {o, e} /
-#C
u, 1 —stress +DROP
C J,
where J = any vowel except u or i. Representations of relevant forms are given below, and it can be seen that the three rules (prefix-LOWER), (DROP), (LOWER) — applied in that order — correctly lower or drop u and i (recall that the specification + D R O P has been repressed; any u, i not marked —DROP should be read as if it were specified -f DROP): podu dfrkazat vu^plsdt podu Ifcbir+e+1 -DROP razu^fzigJrlJru otu#pij-\-i otu ^pmuj -\-e-\-t podu^birdt podu3fczid-{-6-\-t razu 4t-zig-\-l-\-a otu^pij-\-e-\-t
POD-S-KAZAT' V-PISAT POD-BERET
RAZ-ZEG OT-PEJ OTMOJET PODOBRAT P0D02DET RAZOZGLA OTO-P'JET
Although this analysis "works", it is quite clearly not correct The environment of (prefix-LOWER) includes the entire rule (DROP); moreover the environment of (prefix-LOWER) includes the proposed language-independent constraint on dropping stressed vowels and the inclusion of a statement that the following root may not be an idiosyncratic exception to the following rule. If the reasoning behind the formulation of (prefix-LOWER) is correct, then the statement of the rule should be as follows: (prefix-LOWER)'
prefixal u, i is lowered if and only if followed by a root containing u, i which will be dropped by (DROP).
But if (prefix-LOWER)' is the correct formulation of the rule governing prefixal«, i, then phonological theory must be formulated in such a way that a rule of the grammar is allowed to look ahead of
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THEODORE M. LIGHTNER
itself: its application or non-application may be permitted to depend on the application or non-application of a rule t h a t follows. Another analysis is possible: rather than drop u, i straight away, as was done in rule (DROP), we could characterize those u, i's to be dropped by means of some special feature specification — characterize them as —VOICED, for example 13 — and then include a rule to drop voiceless vowels and a rule to lower voiced u, i. These rules would take roughly the following form: (1) (2) (3) (4)
unstressed, non-prefixal u, i are specified —voiced unless followed immediately by a syllable containing u, i. prefixal u, i are specified —voiced unless followed immediately by a syllable containing a voiceless vowel. voiceless vowels are dropped. {u, i} - {o, e}
The derivations of RAZ-2EG, RAZO-2GLA, and PODO-2DAT' under this analysis are as follows: und. repr razu-%zig-\-l-\-u razu^zig-\-l-\-d u i (1) u (2) 0 0 0 (3) C O (4) razzdg razozgld result:
podu+a+£ i
0 o podozddt
Under this analysis, the root bir is specified idiosyncratically as an exception to rule (1) in the present tense, and the derivation of P O D B E R E T is as follows: underlying representation: -(1) (1) (2)
(3) (4) derived representation:
ii
podberet
I am indebted to Jeanette Gundel for this suggestion.
'VOWEL-ZERO' ALTERNATIONS IN MODERN RUSSIAN
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§5. E V A L U A T I N G T H E T W O A N A L Y S E S
In deciding how to choose between the analysis presented in §§ 2-3 and the analysis presented in § 4, it is necessary to examine the motivation behind the competing linguistic theories. The proponent of the voiceless vowel theory would presumably claim that the theory of phonology advocated by Chomsky and Halle, and their followers — in particular the constraints on rule ordering — is sufficiently powerful to account for phonological phenomena found in languages of the world. The choice of the feature ¿ V O I C E D — instead of, say, ¿NASALIZED, ± P H A R Y N GALIZED, or some equally unlikely feature — will be defended on the basis of the fact that there are reasonably well-documented languages with voiceless vowels which drop. Thus, for example, lax i, u under certain conditions may be pronounced voiceless in Japanese, and some of these voiceless vowels may optionally be dropped.14 One might try to rectify the necessity of referring to UNSTRESSED vowels in rule (1) by proposing a language-independent condition that stressed vowels may not be specified —VOICED, but such a proposal seems incorrect in view of such Japanese forms with voiceless, stressed, high-pitched vowels as h\ta 'came', s\hu 'four times nine', and so on. The proponent of the analysis which permits the grammar to look ahead of itself will presumably argue against the voiceless vowel analysis by claiming that the resulting derivations are artificial (perhaps because one never finds voiceless [u] or [i] in phonetic representations in Russian). This theory will claim that a simple linear ordering of rules is not a sufficiently powerful device to capture the relevant generalizations to be found in languages of the world. Kisseberth (1971) presents examples in which the grammar must "look behind itself": in order to capture a generalization, arule must be formulated that applies not merely to the output of the immediately preceding rule but which must be permitted to look back at the shape of the string BEFORE the preceding rule applied. University of Texas, Austin
Actually, the situation here is a bit more complex than suggested in the text; brief discussion, see Lightner (1970), pp. 180-181 and esp. p. 215 fn 5. 14
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THEODORE M. LIGHTNER REFERENCES
Coats, Herbert S. 1970a "The Assignment of Stress in Modem Russian" (unpublished P h D dissertation, University of Minois). 1970b "Rule Environment Features in Phonology", Papers in Linguistics 2 (1), 110-140. Kisseberth, Charles W. 1970 "The Treatment of Exceptions", Papers in Linguistics 2 (1), 46-58. 1971 "Klamath Phonology", Studies in Honor of Renée and, Henry Kahane (University of Illinois Press). Lightner, Theodore M. 1966 "On the Phonology of Old Church Slavonic Conjugation", IJSLP X, 1-28. 1969 "On the Alternation e ~ o in Modern Russian", Linguistics 54, 44-69. 1970 "Why and How Does Yowel Nasalization Take Place?" Papers in Linguistics 2 (2), 179-226. 1972 Problems in the Theory of Phonology: Russian Phonology and Turkish Phonology (Linguistic Research, Inc.: Edmonton, Alberta, Canada). Trubetzkoy, Nikolaj 1934 Das morphonologische System der russischen Sprache = TCLP 5 (deuxième partie).
PART TWO
LITERATURE
THE WRITER AS WITNESS: THE ACHIEVEMENT OP ALEXANDER SOLZHENITSYN VICTOR ERLICH
A recent visitor to the Soviet Union, fortunate enough to meet and befriend some nonconformist Russian intellectuals, will almost invariably find in the homes of his hosts three literary icons. These are Anna Axmatova, Boris Pasternak and Alexander Solzhenitsyn. Solzhenitsyn is the only surviving member of the trinity and the only representative of prose-fiction in this heterodox literary pantheon. For thousands of literate men and women all over Russia he is the conscience of modern Russian literature, a moral force, a culture hero. More than a mere writer, one may be tempted to say. The phrase, however, would be misleading: Solzhenitsyn's moral authority derives primarily from his being a writer, more exactly from being the kind of writer he chose and dared to be. An attempt to assess the literary accomplishment of a novelist of such stature and resonance is inevitably a humbling and a precarious task. As is so often the case in dealing with recent Soviet literature, literary and moral-political considerations are so closely intertwined here as to be virtually inseparable. When, as readers of One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, we confront the belated revelation of a long-denied nightmare, "no sane person", to quote Irving Howe, "can be expected to register a purely literary response". 1 What is called for, I submit, is not literary purism, but respect for the autonomy of literary criteria. Our admiration for the man and our affinity for his stance need not determine our considered judgment of the scope and the texture of the writer's achievement. A moving human testimony couched in fictional terms may or may not be a literary masterpiece. At the same time, we would do 1
Irving Howe, "Predicaments of Soviet Writing", I, The New (May 12, 1963).
Republic
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well to beware of the opposite danger, that of inhibiting our literary response, of underestimating the heroic writer's actual effectiveness out of an excessive distrust of our own motives, an inordinate fear of being or appearing to be swayed by extra-literary considerations. Let me mention another difficulty which seems to beset a Western critic of fiction in dealing with Solzhenitsyn. His conceptual apparatus, attuned as it is to the post-modern sophistication of Nabokov and Borges, John Barth and Nathalie Sarraute, is likely to grind to a halt in the face of a novelist so sturdily and expansively old fashioned, so steeped in the 19th-century realistic tradition, so unself-conscious about the "point of view" as to insert casually into a section of his major novel which reconstructs a protagonist's past largely in his own terms an unabashedly explicit authorial generalization: "He [Rubin, V. E.] was all-in-all a tragic figure." 2 This uneasiness, this uncertainty of criteria, may account in part for a freakishly wide range of responses to Solzhenitsyn in American criticism. In an early reaction, 3 Franklin D. Reeve hailed One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich as one of the greatest works of 20thcentury European literature, more accomplished than Thomas Mann's Death in Venice or Andre Gide's The Counterfeiters. Several years later, in discussing Solzhenitsyn's longest and most ambitious novel, The First Circle, Robert Garis adjudged him a mediocre if "honorable" writer. 4 Strangely enough, both Reeve and Garis went out of their way to play down the topicality of Solzhenitsyn's work. Mr. Reeve contended that One Day was "really" not about a Soviet forced labor camp, but about a man's search for himself. Mr. Garis claimed that Solzhenitsyn's social criticism could have been directed with equal force against "any" society. I am tempted to suggest that this curious convergence between otherwise so disparate assessments points to another pitfall of modern criticism — notably its occasional preference for the fanciful over the "obvious". The latter, in this case, might be couched in an unexciting, but, I believe, correct proposition that, while the import of Solzhenitsyn's fiction clearly transcends its immediate setting, much of his authority and persuasiveness derives from his immersion in Soviet reality, his unerring sense of the characteristically, if not always uniquely, 2
V kruge pervorn (Paris: YMCA Press, 1969), 477. "The House of Living", The Kenyon Review (Spring 1963), 356-360. * "Fiction Chronicle", The Hudson Review (April 1969), 148-154. 3
T H E W R I T E R AS W I T N E S S
93
Soviet institutional patterns, of the characteristically, if not always uniquely, Russian modes of repression and protest, of depravity and integrity. But I am getting ahead of my story. I t is high time that we stop worrying about the critics' dilemmas, whether real or imaginary, and confront our subject. I t is symbolic of Solzhenitsyn's place in modern Russian literature that he should have begun his career as a taboo-breaker. In his momentous debut, One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, (1962), a dread institution whose existence had hitherto been ignored or timidly hinted at by an Erenburg, a Dudincev, or a Viktor Nekrasov was suddenly catapulted into public view. The grim routine of what a French writer, David Rousset, had called "l'univers concentrationnaire", the unspeakable squalor and misery, the backbreaking labor, the animal scrounging for food, is authenticated here by a wealth of detail and made more credible by the author's quiet, undramatic manner. One Day is not a horror story. Physical violence appears in the novel not as a central actuality, but as an everpresent threat. When the shivering, hungry inmates start their forced march, the guards load their rifles: any false step will mean death. The long, grueling sequence from reveille to "lights-out" chronicled in Solzhenitsyn's unhurried narrative represents an ordinary, in fact, a relatively "lucky" day in the life of the tale's goodnatured protagonist who, even in the forced labor camp inferno, takes pride in a job well done. As the story draws to its close, Ivan Denisovich muses thus: "He had had a lot of luck today . . . they hadn't put him in the cooler. He had finagled an extra bowl of mush at noon . . . nothing had spoiled the day, and it had been almost happy "5 Though technically One Day is a third-person narrative, the point of view is provided here by a "simple" peasant whose potential for survival is greater than his ratiocinative powers. This device, skillfully and consistently employed, is both a strength and a built-in limitation. The language of One Day — an effective blend of the earthy peasant vernacular with the harsh camp jargon which occasionally lapses into profanity — is a far cry from the colorless, One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich (New York: Frederick A. Praeger,
1963), 209-210.
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timidly puritan prose of "socialist-realist" fiction. It is also testimony to Solzhenitsyn's sturdy sense of style — a quality which, of late, has not been much in evidence in Soviet fiction. Yet the sustained "folksy" stylization which lends solidity and color to the verbal texture of One Day, constricts the story's scope and import and obviates the need for, indeed eliminates the possibility of, an articulate judgment on the life presented. Solzhenitsyn's keen ear for the leisurely rhythms of Russian folk speech stands him in good stead in a story which, to my mind, is his most accomplished work to date, "Matrena's Home" (1963). The narrator, who, not unlike the author, is a former political prisoner and a teacher, decides to "cut loose and get lost in the innermost heart of Russia, if there is any such thing". 6 The phrase seems to suggest a hankering for some traditional Russian ambience. In fact, both the language and the moral tenor of "Matrena's Home" have a strikingly old-fashioned quality. The central figure of the story, a selfless, gentle, pure-of-heart peasant woman, makes one think of the quiet radiance of that chastened village belle, Lukerja, in Turgenev's "The Living Relic". When Matrena dies, a victim, symbolically, of her neighbor's brutal, unthinking acquisitiveness, the narrator is moved to comment: "We all lived beside her and never understood that she was the righteous one, without whom no village can stand, nor any city. Nor our homeland."7 None of this was likely to please the official critics. Owing to Khrushchev's personal imprimatur, One Day enjoyed initially a measure of immunity, but "Matrena's Home" was fair game. The story was promptly attacked for offering a distorted picture of the Soviet village. Did the author fail to realize that such "capitalistic" attitudes as competitiveness and greed had long ago disappeared from the Soviet countryside ? Nor was Solzhenitsyn's positive message — clearly at odds with the "struggle"-oriented and stridently public Soviet ethos — any less objectionable. It is a matter of record that neither of Solzhenitsyn's full-length novels was allowed publication in his native land. The writer whom many Russians regard, in Yevtushenko's phrase, as "our only living classic", has been forced underground. Was this due to the deterioration of the Soviet cultural climate since Khrushchev? 6
'
"Matrenin dvor", A. Solzenicyn, SoSinenija (Poaev, 1966), 195. Ibid., 231.
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95
While the fact itself is undeniable, in all fairness to present-day Russia's dour-faced bosses, there is little reason to assume that either Cancer Ward or The First Circle would have received a nod from the more ebullient Nikita Khrushchev. A Western critic, mindful of the larger thrust of Solzhenitsyn's fiction and conditioned to symbol-hunting, may be tempted to construe Cancer Ward as a parable for a deadly disease which had eaten its way into the Soviet body politic. 8 This temptation ought to be resisted. Cancer Ward is a sturdily realistic novel rather than an allegory. It appears to be a thoroughly reliable and accurate portrayal of a "real" cancer ward in a "real" hospital in Soviet Central Asia. Characteristically, the impression of authenticity owes at least as much to the apparent mastery of the realia — the density of the relevant medical detail — as it does to the biographical fact of Solzhenitsyn's actually having had a bout with lung cancer. Yet it is hardly necessary to insist that the novel has wider, nonmedical implications. The motif of an incurable or seemingly incurable illness serves here as a mode of revealing character and impelling a verdict over the meaning or meaninglessness of a doomed life. The nearly inescapable parallel with Leo Tolstoy's masterly "Death of Ivan Il'ich" has already been drawn.9 While the affinity between the two works is undeniable, one of the significant differences is that while in Tolstoy the moment of truth dramatizes the terrible emptiness of an "ordinary" life — Ivan Il'ich is Everyman! — in Solzhenitsyn the ultimate confrontation is a sui generis projective test designed to elicit a variety of character-and-status-determined responses. Already in this, the less ambitious of his two major novels, Solzhenitsyn demonstrates his remarkable ability to encompass within a confining institutional framework a galaxy of richly differentiated character studies. Here is a successful Stalinist bureaucrat Rusanov, appalled at being thrown together with the "common people" whom he presumably serves, blithely assuming that each morning he 8
For obvious reasons, the above interpretation was eagerly adopted by some of Solzhenitsyn's Soviet detractors. At a November 17, 1966, meeting of the Artistic Prose Division of the Soviet Writer's Union, one N. Asanov meandered ominously: "Cancerous growth, incurability of cancer . . . suppose what is meant here is not an individual, but [our] society?" ( N o v y j ¿urnal, No. 93 [New York, 1968], 229). 9 See especially Deming Brown, "Cancer Ward and The First Circle", Slavic Review (June 1969), 304-313.
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ought to be the first to get the newspaper, not only because he is an important person, but because he alone is able to decipher the arcane language of the P a r t y edicts; a smug dignitary whose arrogance is visibly eroded by the inexorable progress of his illness and his mounting dependency on the hospital staff and his fellow patients. Here is a dedicated young geologist, racing against time for the sake of the only thing t h a t matters to him — a scientific breakthrough which he feels he alone is capable of effecting; a tough, unscrupulous operator, deeply stirred b y the reading of Leo Tolstoy's parable " W h a t Do Men Live B y ? " and, characteristically, unable to share his excitement and his belated soul-searching either with the cliché-ridden P a r t y hack or the single-track-minded scientist. A former labor camp inmate Kostoglotov, intransigent and blunt to the point of rudeness, who in a heated exchange with Rusanov, calls him a "racist" for judging people by their social origins rather than by what they are or do. Finally there is a haggard ex-academician whose physical misery is compounded by a crushing sense of guilt over having been silent while the best of his contemporaries were vilified, tortured and annihilated. I n his relentless integrity, his past ordeals and his current difficulties of "readjustment", Oleg Kostoglotov comes closest to being the author's counterpart as well as the hero of the novel. His intimate entanglements — a timid yet urgent romance, poignantly undercut by medical treatment which threatens his sexual potency — are handled with empathy and tact. Yet interestingly enough, it is the guilt-ridden ex-conformist Sulubin who is entrusted with articulating as positive a moral-political vision as any found in the Solzhenitsyn oeuvre — a vision of "ethical socialism", 10 of a "society in which all relationships, principles and laws would be based on morality and on nothing else". 11 10
Characteristically, Sulubin insists on labeling his brand of socialism as ethical or moral (nravatvennyj) rather than "Christian" or "democratic". Though the good society that he envisions is to be built on love rather t h a n on hate, the slogan of "Christian Socialism" strikes him as too pat and "too far removed from reality". B y the same token, the phrase "democratic socialism" is discarded as overly procedural and essentially negative. The word "democratic", maintains Sulubin, "does not describe the nature of socialism, but its form, a kind of institutional set-up. But this is just a declaration . . . that heads won't roll, but nothing is said about what t h i s socialism will be built on." (p. 370). 11 Rakovyj Icorpus (Paris: YMCA Press, 1968), 371.
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The attribution of what can be assumed to be the author's own social ideals to — if I m a y paraphrase a current cliché — a member of Stalinist Russia's "silent majority", a man, who unlike Solzhenitsyn or Kostoglotov, h a d failed the test of courage, is a singularly compassionate, non-vindictive gesture. Moreover, Sulubin's credo suggests an i m p o r t a n t Solzhenitsyn theme — t h a t of a m a n ' s ability to think heterodox thoughts while bowing to outward pressures, an ability which no amount of repression, short of one's actual annihilation, can totally inhibit or destroy. "Tell me", asks Kostoglotov, "did you think of this during those twenty-five years when you were bowing low and renouncing your beliefs?" "Yes, I did", answers Sulubin, " I renounced everything and I went on thinking. I stuffed t h e books into the stove a n d I kept thinking. W h y not ? H a v e n ' t I earned t h e right to a few thoughts through m y sufferings, through my betrayal?" 1 2 The motif of inward freedom which " t h e y " cannot t a k e away f r o m you reappears in a different key in Solzhenitsyn's most broadly conceived work, whose title is drawn f r o m Dante's "Inferno", The First Circle. I n Solzhenitsyn's fictional universe "hell" is t h e Soviet forced labor camp system. I t s "first circle", its upper stratum, is the technical research institute on the outskirts of Moscow, whose employees — top-flight scientists, engineers and mechanics — are brought f r o m the lower circles of t h e inferno in order to work feverishly on high-priority security assignments. The "project", which provides the core of t h e bulky narrative, is a concerted effort t o evolve a technique whereby a minute acoustic analysis of a t a p p e d telephone conversation could yield t h e speaker's identity. The "privileged" victims of a totalitarian regime are compelled thus to strain their intelligence and skills in order to entrap others into t h e f a t a l net. The tragic irony of t h e situation is compounded b y t h e fact t h a t some of the more dedicated researchers-inmates are propelled not merely by a fear of returning to the pit, b u t also b y a misplaced intellectual zest and residual P a r t y loyalty. The central plot of this wide-ranging novel, encased in three frenzied and fateful days, is t h a t of a chilling technological suspense story. On December 24, 1949, Innokenty Volodin, an up-and-coming young Soviet diplomat, makes a call from a public booth: he is trying to warn an eminent Soviet physician whom he has known 12
Ibid., 372.
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since childhood against sharing a medical discovery with his French colleagues and thus walking into a trap laid for him. The conversation is intercepted. Two days later, an enthusiastic philologist, turned acoustician in the elite prison-institute, breathlessly announces a breakthrough on the voice-identification "front". In a matter of hours, Volodin lands in the dread Moscow jail Lubjanka: a dignitary is reduced to an unperson . . . It is a tribute to Solzhenitsyn's novelistic skill that working out of so narrow a base, he manages, by making full use of the inmates' links with the outside world, to bring into the compass of his narrative various strata of Soviet society — security officials, diplomats, writers, students. The cumulative effect is as panoramic a vision of Stalinist Russia as any found in recent Soviet literature. The picture of the Soviet system which emerges from Solzhenitsyn's narrative is as credible as it is terrifying. 13 It is a bureaucratic spiral of fear: everybody, from the boss of the secret police through the head of the "research institute" and its divisional directors down to the prison guard, is terrorized, for everybody's career and life are literally "on the line". A blunder, a failure to meet a typically unrealistic deadline, can easily prove irreversible. This pyramid of terror is capped by the Leader, a devious, vindictive, pathologically suspicious and grubbily lonely tyrant. The Stalin sequence in The First Circle has come in for vigorous criticism. I t has been found jarring, if not self-indulgent, a lapse into pamphleteering, an obtrusion of loaded speculation upon a well-authenticated testimony. These strictures have some validity. Solzhenitsyn's Stalin — though, to my mind, credible enough — lacks the authority and the depth of his best characterizations. Occasional intrusion of heavy sarcasm, of de facto editorializing, into a reconstruction of Stalin's nighttime thoughts, represents a discernible shift in tone and style. (The importance of this "lapse" can be easily overestimated. A vaster and more resonant work than One Day, The First Circle fails to achieve, or for that matter, to aim at, the degree of stylistic unity which characterized Solzhenitsyn's compact debut.) Y e t the implication that the Stalin chapters are a foreign body in Solzhenitsyn's fictional universe strikes me as totally false. Whatever their shortcomings, they represent an organic, perhaps an indisIn a lecture recently delivered at Yale, Hannah Arendt maintains that The First Circle ought to be required reading for students of totalitarianism. 11
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pensable, element of the novel's structure, not only because the picture of the sytem would not have been complete without its pivot, but, and more importantly, because Solzhenitsyn's conception of Stalin is an essential aspect of the moral dialectics which informs The First Circle. Though the theme of incarceration dominates the world of Solzhenitsyn, the rather platitudinous, if not altogether erroneous, notion of Stalin's Russia as one big prison is not the central, let alone the distinctive, insight here. What confronts us is a seeming moral paradox: only in prison can one be really free. Only those who, like Nerzin, Bobynin, Xorobrov, have nothing to lose since they have already lost everything — influence, power, material possessions, often their loved ones — can maintain their basic humanity, their personal dignity, their ability to act upon the dictates of their consciences.14 But if only the powerless can be brave, it stands to reason t h a t the Omnipotent Leader should be the most fearful of them all. Thus, rather than being a gratuitous discharge of the author's pent-up rage, the image of Stalin's free-floating paranoia completes the moral equation which is central to the novel. I t eminently belongs in the picture. Though not a flawless work, The First Circle is a compelling literary performance. To have launched a multi-level and many-voiced novel through the medium of a fateful "phone call", and, having plausibly and dramatically intertwined so many individual destinies, to have brought the narrative back to its starting point in the powerful scene ofVolodin's arrest, one of the most memorable passages in modern Russian literature, is eloquent testimony to Solzhenitsyn's compositional resources and narrative gifts. By the same token, it is a tribute to Solzhenitsyn's powers of characterization that both the novel's chief protagonist, Gleb Nerzin, and his loving adversary, Lev Rubin, should be so thoroughly convincing, so richly credible. Solzhenitsyn succeeds where many creditable novelists have failed. I n Nerzin he has created a "positive hero" who dispenses 14
Bobynin states the matter forcefully in the course of a confrontation with the sinister Man of Power, the head of the MGB, Abakumov: "I have nothing, you understand, nothing ! You can't get m y wife or child — a bomb got them first. My parents are already dead. All I own is my handkerchief. . . you took m y freedom away long ago. What else can you threaten me with ? What else can you deprive me of? . . ." (p. 183).
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with false heroics, an author's alter ego who is not an ideological vehicle b u t a fully realized human being. A humanist who, in his journey through hell, has jettisoned his illusions but not his values, a thinking man who sets more store by experience than by ideology, an intellectual who is free of intellectual pride, 15 a mathematician who, in a quixotic gesture, foregoes the rewards of the relative security of a strenuous cryptographic project in order to keep himself available to reflection, to "learning about life" on one of the lowest rungs of the labor camp inferno, Nerzin is one of the few truly satisfying portrayals of an honorable man in modern literature. If Nerzin is a triumph of objectified introspection, Lev Rubin is a feat of empathy for the "Other". A life-loving doctrinaire, a brilliant and erudite scholar who, after all his ordeals, persists in speaking about Stalin in terms of uncritical adulation, an honest and warm-hearted man betrayed by a mixture of intellectual exuberance and misguided patriotism into tightening a noose on the neck of an unsuspecting victim, Lev Rubin as a fictional creation bears witness to Solzhenitsyn's compassion and to his keen awareness of the tragic complexity of human motives. As one surveys Solzhenitsyn's fictional universe, from Ivan DenisoviS's struggle for "an extra bowl of mush" down to Nerzin's brief and tense prison meeting with his wife, the overarching impression, the salient quality is that of relentless veracity. No other living Russian writer has earned as fully as did Solzhenitsyn the right to echo the young Tolstoy's famous credo and battlecry: "The real
15
Therein lies a significant difference between Nerzin and another appealing protagonist of The First Circle, Sologdin. A brilliant and proud man, a relentless challenger of orthodox pieties which Rubin seeks to uphold, Sologdin is the most articulate non-conformist in The First Circle. In one of his confrontations with Rubin he clearly speaks for the author as he exclaims: "The higher the ends the higher must be the means ! . . . Morality shouldn't lose force as it increases its scope !" (p. 469). And yet it is at least arguable that in the end Sologdin's intellectual pride subverts his intransigence. Since his superiors desperately need Sologdin's problem-solving talents, he turns the tables on them ! Instead of grovelling and begging for favors, the powerless prisoner confronts the powers-that-be with an ultimatum. He wins, but only at the cost of agreeing to play the game, which the less flamboyant Nerzin firmly refuses to do.
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hero of my tale, whom I love with all the force of my soul . . . is Truth." 16 Yet, one might interpose, is not the parallel with one of the world's literary giants precisely the kind of extravagant overestimate against which I was cautioning in my opening remarks ? Not necessarily. I t is a legitimate tribute to the moral force and the literary solidity of Solzhenitsyn's oeuvre that the parallel should suggest itself so readily. By the same token, it is no reflection on the import and the genuineness of his attainment to urge that the analogy not be pressed too far. (How many distinguished novelists could stand this comparison without being diminished by it?) A standard reaction to a Solzhenitsyn character or incident is "yes, that's the way it must have been", "yes, that's the way people — or this particular kind of person — act under stress". Yet when Tolstoy describes Levin's and Kitty's honeymoon, the "truth" about personal relations acquires the force of a moral jolt, of an unsettling epiphany. To put it differently, it is obvious, at least to me, that Solzhenitsyn is a major writer. Yet if "greatness" in literature spells transcendent moral illumination and/or an esthetic breakthrough, this quality may have to be denied to Solzhenitsyn as it would have to be denied, I believe, to any other living novelist. A final distinction: in Solzhenitsyn, as in Tolstoy, "truth" is both an avowed ideal and a polemical strategy, a challenge to the idées reçues. Yet their lines of attack are different. An iconoclast of genius, Tolstoy had set out to dislodge the extant fictional modes of seeing and portraying reality. His leitmotif, to quote the brilliant Formalist critic Boris Ejxenbaum, 17 was "it is not" what you think (neto). War is not what you think ("The Sebastopol Stories", War and Peace). Love is not what you think (Family Happiness). History is not what you think (War and Peace). Solzhenitsyn's immediate targets are not literary conventions grown stale, but externally imposed and enforced taboos and clichés. The task that fell to him, at the peak of the post-Stalin literary thaw, was no less significant for being more "elementary". For in a situation where, to paraphrase his own words, "many an author [who] saw and touched the truth . . . lied with cold glassy eyes", 18 "Sevastopol' v m a e " , L. Tolstoj, Sobranie soSinenij 2 (Moscow, 1958), 158. 17 Molodoj Tolstoj ( P e t r o g r a d - B e r l i n , 1922). M
18
V kruge pervom, 198.
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calling a spade a spade, naming the unnameable, was a liberating act. To establish a reliable connection between words and things, between language and the facts of experience, is to recreate the essential conditions of a genuine literary enterprise, to restore to Russian literature mired in ready-made formula«, in melodramatic stereotypes, its proper role, its natural function, that of search, exploration, and above all, testimony. Let me cite in closing a poignant passage from Cancer Ward, a conversation between Kostoglotov and another former labor camp inmate, a cultivated, middle-aged woman reduced to the status of a hospital orderly. She speaks with bitterness about her daughter's shedding tears over Anna Karenina. To Elizaveta Anatol'evna Anna's fate is almost enviable: she made a choice and paid the price. How about us, she asks in an anguished whisper. How about millions whose lives were destroyed or maimed by police arbitrariness? "Where can I read about us? In a hundred years?" 19 Thanks to Solzhenitsyn, she did not have to wait that long: he has heeded her call. In his fiction, the speechless have found a voice, the dispossessed a home. To have borne witness to the truth in the teeth of mounting persecution is an act of moral courage unsurpassed in this or any other era. To have done so on a scale and in a manner commensurate with the magnitude of the subject, is one of the major literary achievements of our time. Yale University
19
Rakovyj ¡corpus, p. 402.
T H E GOGOL PROBLEM: PERSPECTIVES FROM ABSENCE
DONALD FANGER
"Truly", Gogol wrote his mother shortly before his nineteenth birthday, " I am considered a riddle by everyone . . . At home they consider me capricious, some kind of unbearable pedant who thinks he is smarter than anyone, t h a t he has been created differently from other people . . . Here [at school] they call me humble, the ideal of meekness and patience. I n one place I am the most quiet, modest, courteous; in another, melancholy, pensive, uncouth, etc.; in a third, garrulous . . . with some clever, with others stupid . . . Consider me what you will, but only once I have embarked on my real career will you come to know my true character."1 Fourteen years later, he had more than embarked on his real career. He was now famous as the author of Dead Souls, The Inspector General, and all the artistic work he was to publish in his lifetime. Indeed, he said he had "no life outside literature" — by which he meant outside the projected volumes t h a t would complete Dead Souls. B u t the answer was now postponed. Only the completion of the novel, he said, "will finally solve the riddle of my existence" (XII, 58). Ten years later, most of the long-promised, once(perhaps twice-) burned manuscript of Volume I I was burned again (by mistake, he said); ten years of the life (excepting one fiasco, Selected Passages from Correspondence with Friends, which needed to be redeemed by the progress of Dead Souls) were cancelled; and his death, clearly not without suicidal intent, followed quickly. The riddle of his existence thus remained, in the sense t h a t the work which was to crown it and show the sense of its evolution was missing. He did, it is true, hint at least at a partial answer which he said 1
N . V. Gogol', Polnoe sobranie socinenij X (Akademija Nauk SSSR, 19371952), 123. All subsequent references to Gogol's writings are to this edition and included in parentheses in the text.
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he had prepared as a posthumous gift to his fellow-countrymen. Selected Passages opens with a testament, and there he wills them "the best of all the things that my pen has produced, . . . my composition entitled 'A Farewell Tale' (ProScalnaja povest)". It would reveal to them "if only in part the strict secret of life and the most sacred heavenly music of that secret". He was reserving publication, he explained in a footnote, because "what could have significance after [the writer's] death has no sense during [his] lifetime" (VIII, 220-222). "A Farewell Tale" was apparently never written — and Dostoevsky did not hesitate to brand Gogol's references to it as vran'e — prevarication. Gogol, he suggested, here and elsewhere, was an early version of his own "underground man".2 When Gogol died in 1852, there was a general sense that a greatness had passed from the scene — a greatness whose explanation lay in the future. Ivan Aksakov said as much in an obituary notice that alarmed the Minister of National Education: "A great deal of time must still pass", he wrote, "before all the deep and weighty significance of Gogol is fully understood — Gogol, that artist-monk, Christian-satirist, ascetic and humorist, that martyr of the exalted ideal and the unsolved riddle". Why, the Minister complained in a secret letter, should so much time be necessary to grasp Gogol's significance fully ? "Can the writer of this article really think that this significance is so unfathomable that none of our contemporaries is in a position to form a clear understanding of Gogol from his works ? And why is such a deep and weighty significance attributed primarily to Gogol?"3 The mystery was vexing — and persistent. In 1909 one of the most brilliant and perceptive of all Gogol's critics (and the one who, of all, examined his texts most closely) declared categorically: "We still do not know what Gogol is" (My eSce ne znaem, cto takoe Gogol).*' * In a manuscript of the early 1870's, Dostoevsky speaks of "that same underground nature, which made Gogol, in a solemn testament, speak of a final tale which had sung itself out of his soul — and which in reality did not exist at all". Dostoevsky goes on to suggest that when Gogol began writing his testament he may not even have known that he was about to mention a "final tale". V. V. Vinogradov, O jazylce xudozestvennoj literatury (Moscow, 1959), 398—399. 9 A. S. Nikolaev and Ju. G. Oksman, eds., Literaturnyj Muzeum I (Petersburg, 1922), 98. Emphasis added. 4 Andrej Belyj, "Gogol", in his Lug zelenyj (Moscow, 1910), 96.
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That statement, I submit, remains true today. The volume of Gogol studies — articles and books in Russian and in all the European languages — is enormous, b u t most of it tends, reductively, to emphasize some one aspect of the complex phenomenon at the expense of the rest. Did Gogol portray vulgar Russian types and common Russian objects? Then he must be "the poet of reality". And not only that, b u t a writer who is "true to life to the last degree". Thus Belinsky, whose approach and conclusions have been matter for quotation and exegesis, voluntary and involuntary, ever since — so t h a t even now an American or west European, reacting in disgust, can hardly bring himself to consider what "social" might mean in connection with Gogol's work, let alone why intelligent people could once have wanted to call him a "realist". Instead, we prefer to cite the resolutely antisocial Nabokov, who finds in his influential little book that "fancy is only fertile when it is futile", and not only emphasizes (which is easy) b u t exaggerates (which is difficult) the oddity of both the man ("the oddest man in Russia") and the work. 5 Such reactions continue to keep Gogol criticism off balance. I n some sense the victim of history during his lifetime, he has remained a victim of history ever since. From which it follows t h a t the historical dimension of the Gogol problem — albeit in need of reformulation and new approaches — must necessarily be an import a n t one. J u s t how is what I shall attempt to suggest. The problem is vast, and my emphasis will be selective, if not arbitrary. B u t I shall try throughout to keep one eye on methodology. The Gogol phenomenon itself is elusive partly for intrinsic reasons — and if we look at the works themselves, we find t h a t they are not only often enigmatic when taken severally, b u t that as a body they tend to be intractable. His genius, t h a t is to say, was for the fragmentary, the grotesquely proportioned and the unresolved, and this can be seen not only in particular productions, but in his oeuvre as a whole. One can hardly speak fruitfully of periods in his work, for example, or hope to clarify much by approaching him in terms of creative development.
s Vladimir Nabokov, Nikolai passim.
Gogol (Norfolk, Conn., 1944), 76, 12, and
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To be sure, his first published work and his last, separated by eighteen years, are as different from each other as they could be; b u t they also stand radically apart from the bulk of his central achievement. Hanz Kilchelgarten, published in 1829, is a long, jejune poem subtitled "An Idyll in Pictures"; Selected Passages (1847) is a patchwork of moral, social and literary essays, couched in epistolary form and offered after five years of silence to a public clamorous for the promised second volume of Dead Souls. Selected Passages is rather more complex than the view of it t h a t became traditional after Belinsky's impassioned rebuttal, and it has been unjustly neglected by literary critics. But the point here is t h a t each of these works in its own way represented a blind alley for Gogol, a mistaking of his essential talent. Leaving them aside, then, we find t h a t all the rest of Gogol's writings were published in an intensely productive eleven-year period, from 1831 to 1842. Of these, the years 1831-1836 (up to his departure from Russia) are the years of greatest variety; here he tries his hand at all the forms of prose then being practiced: short stories from an operatic Ukrainian past (Evenings on a Farm near Dilcanlca, 1831—1832); continued in Mirgorod (1835); essays — lyrical, historical, esthetic, pedagogical — most of them collected in Arabesques (1835); stories from contemporary Russian life (some in Arabesques, some in periodicals); book reviews and literary journalism of a very high order; stage comedies (The Inspector General, early drafts of Marriage, several fragments); not to mention weighty works on history (Ukrainian and universal), and geography. 6 From 1836 to 1842, he eschews journalism and concentrates almost exclusively on Dead Souls (as well as on reworking some of his earlier pieces for the Collected Works of 1842-1843); his novel and "The Overcoat" are the masterpieces of these years, and quite overshadow the few narrative and dramatic efforts, most of them fragmentary, to which he also turned. He was twenty-two when the first volume of Evenings came out and made his reputation as a writer; he was thirty-three when Dead Souls and the Collected
• None of the latter seems actually to have been undertaken. But his announced interest in this kind of writing was more than grandiloquence. He did finish the draft of a textbook of literary forms in 1845 (see PSS, VIII, 468-88), and was still collecting materials for works on geography and lexicography late in his life.
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Worlcs were published, and his slow, silent, self-inflicted martyrdom began. Clearly he did develop b u t the process of t h a t development (as opposed to the direction) is not clear, because of his working habits. " H e did not move", as one of his critics observes, " f r o m one work t o another b u t rather, as it were, in a single drawn-out moment embraced a t once t h e whole sum of his artistic ideas — and then, fitfully turning now to one project, now to another, returning again to t h e early ones and at the same time polishing the new ones, suddenly appeared to history entire, in all his greatness." 7 Other conventional lines of approach are hardly more rewarding. The vexed question of his literary filiations, for example, is the subject of an enormous monograph by a man whose surname — Cudakov — seems to vouch for his qualifications in something like the way the name of a student of Dickens' style — Randolph Quirk — does for his. 8 (Cudakov might be rendered as Mr. Eccentric.) For all t h e painstaking scholarship t h a t has gone into the question, however, t h e fact is t h a t there are few clear facts. We know Gogol was familiar with t h e work of the Russian poets of his time — b u t he was a prose writer. We know t h a t he read Richardson's Clarissa, because he says so in a letter; we know t h a t he read a novel b y Dickens in 1840 or 1841, because a Moscow professor caught him in the act in a R o m a n café. B u t we have no reactions t o either of these — and, with respect to t h e foreigners from whom he said he drew inspiration, no evidence of first-hand knowledge a t all. 9 His 1,500-odd letters have much to say about his moods, ambitions and fluctuating creativity — b u t almost nothing about literat u r e itself, Russian or foreign, in practice or in theory. Despite the similarities which Helen Muchnic has noted, then, he is no Flaubert with respect t o t h e articulations of artistic consciousness; for his correspondence hardly allows us to form any picture of his reading, '
G. A. Gukovskij, Realizm Oogolja (Moscow-Leningrad, 1959), 25. G. I. Cudakov, Otnosenie tvorSestva Gogolja k zapadno-evropejskim literaturam (Kiev, 1908). The author provides a detailed list of what Gogol might have read, but is constantly obliged to introduce his assertions with Such phrases as "one may assume". 9 In a draft of Dead Souls, Chapter XI, he mentions looking up from his desk occasionally, to regard the portraits hanging on his wall — "of Shakespeare, Ariosto, Fielding, Cervantes, Pushkin, who reflected nature as it was, and not as someone or other may have wished it to be". PSS, VI, 533. 8
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knowledge, tastes, or even specific awareness of literature.10 As a result, these areas remain all but empty categories, among so many others in the Gogol phenomenon. As for the temperament and the life, the more scrupulous the attempt to deal descriptively with them, the likelier it is to be studded with question marks, pock-marked with perhapses, and all but vitiated by conscience-induced gaps. The man was secretive, and though alarmed at what he took to be misinterpretations of his work, he did little to help his contemporaries understand its novelty or what he took to be his intentions. Those whom he did admit to a kind of intimacy found themselves, so to speak, in small rooms that did not communicate; thus the most useful memoirs — Aksakov's, Annenkov's, Smirnova's — give convincing but often contrasting pictures, and the key that would reconcile them is missing. One side of this problem may be illuminated by two categorical statements Gogol made on the subject of sincerity, together with one probable example of it. "You will believe my sincere feelings, won't you?" he writes to Raevskaja on 25 June 1840: "I do not know how to lie" (XI, 290). On 14 December 1844, however, in a revealing passage, he confesses to Shevyrev: "I have absolutely never been able to speak frankly about myself" (XII, 394) — a frank generalization which, like those classic logical selfcontradictors, contains the ground of its own Gogolian undoing. It may well be that both statements are true in this sense: that in speaking of himself Gogol could never be sure that he was lying — or telling the truth. He "confessed" to Smirnova that his relations with literary friends and confreres had always been based on his calculation about how each of them could be useful to him, from which he divined "just what could and could not be said to each"; for a variety of somewhat contradictory reasons he said he had never spoken of his personal plans or of "what related personally to [his] fate" (XII, 433). In short, Gogol's few attempts to speak frankly in his letters were all attempts to speak about frankness, and one feels in them the anguished desire of a man bewildered by his own chronic evasions and mimicry to find his "real" voice and discover what it might have to say. Beginning already with the later drafts of Dead Souls, Volume One, he assumes the authoritative 10
Helen Muchnic, An Introduction to Russian Literature (New York, 1964), 97-101.
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tones of the prophet; his last book, Selected Passages, is written entirely in that vein with few conscious concessions to the perspectives of artistry. This voice, he thought, was that of his very soul, expressing its noblest concerns, inspired by God. But in the fiasco that followed publication Gogol was forced ruefully to recognize that the devil had tricked him; that he had chosen only the least effective and becoming of that "orchestra of voices" which had produced his best narratives; that indirection and implication were his only effective tools; that he was, however, drawn to stable identity and single truth, condemned to approximations. " I never created anything through imagination", he said (VIII, 446); but he also complained that Pushkin had failed to perceive that the characters which so depressed him in the first draft of Dead Souls were all "caricature and my own invention" (VIII, 294). " I cannot say categorically", he wrote late in his career, "whether the writer's field is my field" (VIII, 438); but he also protested that he had no life outside writing and that it was as necessary for him to write as to breathe. One could make a long list of such contradictions — and it may well be that it is precisely their presence which signals the Gogolian authenticity. I t seems likely, in other words, that elusiveness was more than a deliberate tactic with him, that it was as well an essential trait of his being. The motif of evasion, after all, is central in both the life and the work — and Gogol seems to have failed only when he cancelled out the grounds of his genius by trying to evade that fact. Such a perspective from absence, indeed, may allow the most fruitful connection of the life to the work — and of both to the cultural situation in which they took their course. I will return to this point later. I f Gogol had, then, made his identity a work in progress indistinguishable, or at least inseparable, from the completion of his life's work, what about the possibility of conventional biography, descriptive if not interpretative ? The experiences of a writer's life, after all, can at least give us clues as to his temperament and the transmutation of consciousness from life into art. Here, too, however, Gogol's case proves refractory and anomalous. Baldly put, Gogol seems to have led an adult life with virtually no experiences in it. He himself referred to it as a life of "non-events". This must be understood in a special sense. The period from roughly 1830 to 1836 was not only the time when most of his works in virtually all genres were written or conceived; it was the time,
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as well, of his maximal engagement in the life of Petersburg. H e was, often simultaneously, writing stories, plays, lectures, essays, and reviews. H e worked as private tutor, lecturer (and later professor) in history; he took lessons in painting at the Academy; he visited theaters and followed the magazines; he cultivated the acquaintance of Pushkin, Zhukovsky, and other leading figures in the literary world. In short, the life (like the works) of these years shows all the signs of having been a sustained series of energetic tentatives in several directions at once — an affair in which constant motion took the place of any of the usual continuities in a man's life, and tended to mask their absence. This is no more than appropriate when a young man is finding himself; what makes the case "Gogolian" is that the conflicting tentatives were not resolved b u t simply abandoned for a dozen years of European expatriation (punctuated by two disturbing returns to Russia, in 1839-1840 and again in 1841-1842). Since the causes of his decision to flee Russia are unclear, t h a t decision itself can hardly offer a perspective on the events t h a t preceded it — and if we seek illumination of the works from the record of the life, the best we can do here is to register the frequency with which the works show a similar abruptness and apparent discontinuity, taxing our sense of adequate form and clarity of viewpoint. I n any case, from this point on dedication to the work in progress largely drains the personal biography (as opposed to the career) of significant content, manifesting something like t h a t "trope of fictiveness" (figura fikcii) which Andrej Belyj saw as underlying Dead Souls: the specification of featurelessness, the bodying-forth of an absence. In all those years, as before, no scandals, no duels, no arrests; no wife, no mistresses, no sex — "no firsthand knowledge of all those involuntary relationships created by social, economic and political necessity . . . Some writers have spent their lives in the same place and social milieu; [he] kept constantly moving from one place and one country to another. Some have been extroverts who entered fully into whatever society happened to be available; [his] nature made him avoid human contacts as much as possible. Most writers have at least had the experience of parenthood and its responsibilities; this experience was denied [him]". The words are Auden's, describing D. H. Lawrence — and the conclusion he draws can apply to Gogol's case, too, in the late letters and Selected Passages: " I t was inevitable, therefore, that when he tried to lay
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down the law about social and political matters . . . he could only be negative [or naive — D. F.] and moralistic because, since his youth, he had had no firsthand experiences upon which concrete and positive suggestions could have been based." 11 Even financial necessity could not bind him. His income, for example, came only from being a writer — but not exclusively from writing itself. He mentions money fairly frequently in the letters and makes it clear t h a t sales of his works brought in amounts that were insufficient and insufficiently regular. H e was often nearly penniless, and made to realize, as he wrote in a letter of the late thirties, t h a t a writer actually could die of hunger. Yet he never became a proletarian, was never forced to those desperate expedients which left so deep a mark on Dostoevsky's life and art. He was guarded from this by a series of subventions from the Tsar and "loans" from admirers of his talent — a situation made possible on the historical side by the fact that the professionalization of letters was only beginning in his time, and on the personal by the fact t h a t he had nothing beyond his talent and a frail body to support. His only needs were for writing and travel — b u t even the record of his travels cannot be very usefully related to the writings. He did not visit new places to observe, to describe, or to learn, as Tolstoy was to do; his journeys through Europe were neither a cultural pilgrimage nor a flight from creditors, as they were to be for Dostoevsky; nor was Turgenev's mixed political and sentimental motivation for expatriation in any way paralleled in his own. Gogol seems to have chosen new places to visit for their climate, or the presence of well-recommended doctors and well-born compatriots. The journey itself often counted more than the destination, change of place being a spiritual tonic for him, so t h a t when he left Rome or Naples, Paris or Vienna, Ostend or Baden-Baden, one could almost say t h a t he was not so much abandoning a place as resuming a condition. Evasion being so prominent a feature of the life (as of the works) both must appear hermetic, unapproachable except in their own enigmatic terms, closed to the application of external norms or data. We have seen how guarded and calculated were most of his voluntary relationships; the crucial involuntary ones — and they »
W. H. Auden, The Dyer's Hand, and Other Essays (New York, 1968), 293.
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are astonishingly few — seem all to have been with his own divided psyche. 12 He did not come to define himself through being bound in some continuing experiential way to class or politics or place — and if he was a slave to his body, he contrived to be t h a t in the one way t h a t could not further his self-knowledge through experience of another: hypochondria, centering on the digestive system. He did, to be sure, call his works in their succession the history of his soul — by which he meant, apparently, that they represented his evolving sense of values and of the writer's proper mission; b u t neither in his retrospective tracings or in his fiction itself is there any suggestion t h a t personal experience is a progress or a process, Even his last and highest aspiration — to wisdom — involved, in his view, no necessary connection with experience: H e w h o already possesses intelligence a n d reason c a n n o t receive w i s d o m e x c e p t b y p r a y i n g for it b o t h n i g h t and d a y , entreating it o f G o d d a y a n d night, e l e v a t i n g h i s soul t o t h e mildness of a d o v e a n d ordering e v e r y t h i n g w i t h i n h i m s e l f t o t h e u t m o s t p u r i t y in order t o receive t h a t h e a v e n l y g u e s t w h o s h u n s dwellings where t h e spiritual household h a s n o t been p u t in order a n d where there is n o t full h a r m o n y in e v e r y t h i n g ( V I I I , 265).
Not Blake's road of excess and not any road at all will lead to the place of wisdom; one "receives" wisdom as a gift. There seems to be a suggestion t h a t one must merit it, but there is no question of earning it actively through engagement with circumstance and one's fellows. In light of all this, it is not surprising that the major biographical works in Russian seem to confess defeat by the very qualifications of their titles: two years after Gogol's death, P. A. Kulis published "An Attempt at a Biography of Gogol" (Opyt biografii Oogolja); revised and expanded, it was published as "Notes on Gogol's Life" (Zapiski o zizni Gogolja). The most ambitious work, in four volumes, is Senrok's no less tellingly entitled "Materials Toward a Biography of Gogol" (Materialy dlja biografii Gogolja) ; and the most influential in this century (serving as chief source for Nabokov's work, among others) has been V. V. Veresaev's "Gogol in 12 Cf. V i c t o r Erlich, endorsing t h e relevance of R . D . Laing's e x i s t e n t i a l p s y c h o l o g y : "The v i e w of t h e h u m a n p s y c h e t h a t l a y s special stress o n s u c h d i c h o t o m i e s a s t h e real self versus t h e false, u n a u t h e n t i c self, and p a y s special a t t e n t i o n t o t h e devices of c o n c e a l m e n t and i m p e r s o n a t i o n e m p l o y e d b y a peculiarly frail ego a s protection a g a i n s t t h e e n c r o a c h m e n t s o f feared r e a l i t y is likely t o shed significant light o n t h e strange case of N i k o l a j Gogol." (Gogol [ N e w H a v e n a n d L o n d o n , 1969], 215.)
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Life" (Gogol v zizni) — a massive dossier (or "montage", as the form was called in the twenties and thirties) of uncommented and unreconciled documentary excerpts. One may fill in the gaps with supposition — the most serious such attempt is Moiulskij's brilliant version of Gogol's Spiritual Path (Duxovnyj put Oogolja) ; or one can take these documentary collections as a kind of do-it-yourself kit for the construction not of a biography, but of a context for the eternally absent life, for that life (to put it positively) which Gogol, despite some recurrent doubts, proclaimed from the late thirties on to be his only one: his writing. In that area and in that area only do we have sufficient material — by definition — for a study of this elusive pilgrim's progress: a study of a career and the pursuit of a vocation. History, moreover, lends such an inquiry a particular sanction, for in working out a model of the writer's calling, quite as much as in the fiction he produced, Gogol turned out to be a pioneer, his improvisations the starting point of a tradition. Let me try to make plain my purpose in juggling all these impossibilities. Gogol himself, in Chapter 7 of Dead Souls, contrasts two approaches — the telescopic and the microscopic; and I would argue that both are necessary for any treatment of his work that aspires to completeness. The second, essentially ahistorical, is a matter of close attention to the texts, with an eye to following his own shifting emphases rather than practicing that kind of selective emphasis which can make of, say, "The Overcoat" a plea for the "little man", a warning against following false gods, or a mere playful performance — all of them warranted by one or another aspect of the story, but none of them adequate to account for its complex totality. I shall not attempt to use the microscope here; the shortest of his stories woi^d require prohibitive expenditures of time. Instead, let me try to suggest something of what the telescopic approach might contribute toward resolving the Gogol problem. This, as I see it, involves the perspectives of literary history — but of a nontraditional kind, which would avoid the conventional rubrics and catalogues of names to investigate the literary function as it existed in a given time. My specific starting point is Boris Ejxenbaum's observation, made forty years ago and never followed up, that "the question which troubled Gogol all his life was . . . how
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a WRITER, a n d what it meant to be a writer".13 This must be understood as referring to something beyond t h a t personal discovery of vocation which faces any beginning writer; for Gogol, I repeat, t h e question was nothing less t h a n t h e invention of a vocation. 14 We tend so readily to associate him with t h e great age of prose he introduced t h a t it may be worth recalling briefly t h e n a t u r e of the cultural situation he entered, characterized as it was b y a sense of absence — and of expectation. Here are some representative voices f r o m t h a t chorus of complaint which begins in t h e 1820's and persists well into the forties: " W e have neither literature nor books", Pushkin writes in 1824 in a note entitled "On t h e Causes Impeding the Development of Our Literature". The following year Polevoj, in t h e first issue of the Moscow Telegraph, refers to t h e Russians as "barely having begun to write a n d study, children in literature". 1 5 I n 1825, Bestuzev concludes f r o m his "Glance a t Russian Literature During 1824 and t h e Beginning of 1825" t h a t t h e general law of cultural (he calls it natural) development does not apply in Russia: " W e have criticism b u t no literature." Vjazemskij, who h a d written in 1822 t h a t "we are rich in t h e names of poets, b u t poor in creations", found a little later t h a t "judging by t h e books t h a t are printed in Russia, one must conclude either t h a t we have no literature, or TO B E
13
Boris E j x e n b a u m , Moj vremennik (Leningrad, 1929), 8 9 - 9 0 . " I h a v e h a d n o other guides t h a n m y s e l f , and c a n one alone, w i t h o u t t h e h e l p of others, perfect o n e s e l f ? " Gogol asked t h e question w i t h regard t o t h e l y c e u m e d u c a t i o n h e w a s just c o m p l e t i n g a t n i n e t e e n y e a r s o f age in 1828 — b u t h e m i g h t well h a v e repeated it t w e n t y y e a r s later, w h e n h i s artistic career w a s e f f e c t i v e l y over. B e l i n s k y , in fact, repeated i t for h i m , n o t i n g in 1848 t h a t "Gogol h a d n o m o d e l and n o precursors, either i n R u s s i a n or foreign literature" (V. G. Belinskij, Polnoe sobranie socinenij, X [Moscow 1956], 293). 15 For t h i s reason h e w e n t o n t o question t h e possibility of filling a journal e x c l u s i v e l y w i t h R u s s i a n works: "Would it n o t b e better, i n s t e a d o f proposi n g p u b l i c a t i o n of R u s s i a n w o r k s alone and filling i t for t h e m o s t p a r t w i t h s c h o o l b o y prose a n d p o e t r y , t o w i d e n t h e f r a m e w o r k a n d g i v e t h e readers n o t R u s s i a n work alone b u t s i m p l y e v e r y t h i n g of a n elegant, p l e a s i n g and useful nature t h a t c a n be f o u n d in t h e domestic, as well as in all t h e a n c i e n t and m o d e r n literatures. H o w m u c h there is of interest t h a t is still u n k n o w n t o u s — t h e sort of t h i n g t h a t a E u r o p e a n a b s o l u t e l y h a s t o k n o w !" ( M o s c o w Telegraph 1 [1823], "Letter t o N . N . " ; quoted in N . K . K o z m i n , Ocerki iz ietorii russkogo romantizma [Saint Petersburg, 1903], 23). 14
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t h a t we have neither opinions nor character". And Venevitinov, about t h e same time, was calling t h e edifice of Russian literature "illusory" [mnimyj], and t h e situation in the literary world "completely negative". I n a letter t o t h e editor of the Moscow Herald (1828) Pushkin refers to "our infantile literature, which offers no models in any genre", and two years later t h e fifteen-year-old Lermontov indicates in his notebook w h a t this can mean for a beginning writer: "Our literature is so poor t h a t there is nothing I can appropriate from i t . " In 1832 Kireevskij declares Russian literat u r e "still a baby which is only beginning to speak purely", while the critic Nadezdin, with grateful wonder, acknowledges a few poetic blooms "amid the general void and barrenness". I n 1834 Pushkin returns to his theme of ten years before, projecting an article under t h e title: "On t h e Insignificance [nictozestve] of Russian Literature." 1 6 The list of such complaints could be easily extended, b u t to little purpose. All those sad discussions of the lack of a Russian literature to discuss are really about t h e nonexistence of literature as an institution — which argued (according to the prevailing R o m a n t i c view) an incompleteness in society, of which the institution was to be an expression. Y e t t h e very complaint was itself a beginning and, taken u p by more and more voices, turned finally into a Kulturkampf on whose battleground the institution came eventually to be erected. By about 1830, it was becoming clear t h a t t h e battleground would be one of prose. This was t h e medium of competition for a broader reading public; it was also t h e medium for t h a t principled criticism t h a t might aid in t h e formation of writer a n d audience alike. The frequent complaints about the absence of a Russian prose in this period thus referred, not always clearly, to a range of interconnected problems: absence of a mature and flexible instrument, 16
Puskin: "On the Causes . . .", Polnoe sobranie soSinenij v desjati tomax Izdanie vtoroe (AN SSSR, Moscow, 1956-58), VII, 18; "Letter to the editor . . .", ibid., 71; "On the Insignificance . . .", ibid., 306. A. A. Bestuzev: Poljarnaja zvezda, izdannaja A. Bestuzevym i K. Ryleevym (Moscow-Leningrad, 1960), 488. Vjazemskij ("We are rich . . ."): quoted, along with Venevitinov, in N. K. Kozmin, N. K. Nadezdin (St. Petersburg, 1912), 96. Lermontov: Polnoe sobranie soiinenij, IV (Leningrad, 1940), 465. Kireevskij: "Obozrenie russkoj literatury za 1831 g.", Evropeec 1 (1832), 100. Nadezdin: quoted in Kozmin, N. K. Nadezdin, p. 392.
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absence of a normative native style, absence of exemplary genres and techniques in fiction — this last finally subsuming the others because of its (potentially, at least) almost unlimited elasticity, European achievements having already legitimized a view of the novel as incorporating nothing less than "epic and drama, lyricism and philosophy, all of poetry in its thousand facets, all one's age from cover to cover". 17 For such tasks the language of the salons on which Karamzin had based his stylistic reform was clearly too constricting. Yet no other had become established. The majority of Russian writers, Orest Somov declared in 1828, "either wander off the road [sbivaetsja] into the rough fields of the archaic Slavonic-Russian language; or slip and fall on the ruins once heaped together from alien stocks (Gallicisms, Germanisms and so on); or else sink in the base and swampy ground of the coarse, unrefined language of the simple folk". 18 Pushkin had p u t it plainly in 1824: "Scholarship, politics and philosophy have still not found an expression in Russian; a metaphysical language is absolutely nonexistent among us. Our prose is still so little developed t h a t even in simple correspondence we are obliged to invent turns of phrase to convey the most ordinary concepts." 19 The point was echoed repeatedly: "We need", wrote academician Sokolov, "not poets but people who can manage to write correctly and clearly in prose: we have neither an epistolary nor a business style". 20 Among the reasons for this situation, one of the chief ones clearly had to do with the cosmopolitan eccentricity of the educated classes — with the fact, as Bestuzev noted, t h a t "we have been brought up by foreigners, and have drunk in with our mothers' milk non-Russianness (beznarodnost) and admiration only for what is foreign". The result was derivativeness: "There was a time when we were misguidedly wont to sign in the manner of Sterne; then we 17
Bestuzev (Marlinskij) in the Moscow Telegraph (1833); quoted in N. K. Kozmin, 06erki iz istorii russkogo romantizma. N. A. Polevoj kak vyrazitel literaturnyx napravlenij sovremennoj emu epoxi (St. Petersburg, 1903), 374. 18 Severnye cvety za 1829 g. (St. Petersburg, 1828), 83-84; quoted by V. V. Vinogradov, "Jazyk Gogolja i ego znaSenie v istorii russkogo jazyka", in V. V. Golubkov and A. N. Dubovikov, eds., Gogol v skole (Moscow, 1954), 58. 19 "O pridinax, zamedlivsix xod nasej slovesnosti", in Polnoe sobranie soiinenij v desjati tomax VII (Moscow, 1958), 18. 20 Quoted in V. V. Vinogradov, Stil Puskina (Moscow, 1941), 516.
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took to being amiable in French; now we have flown off into Never Never land in the German manner. When will we find our proper sphere? When will we write straightforwardly in Russian? God knows." 2 1 B y 1832, when t h e fiction of Pushkin a n d Gogol h a d already begun to appear, Belinsky's first mentor, Professor Nadezdin, could still depict Russian prose as a tower of Babel, " a confusion of all t h e European idioms t h a t have overgrown in successive layers the wild mass of t h e undeveloped Russian word". 2 2 The general condition of Russian prose, described b y Bestuzev in 1825 as a "steppe, occasionally enlivened by the swift passage of journalistic Bedouins or ponderously moving caravans of translations'', was t o persist for two decades before a major wave of settlement began. 23 The burden of all this complaint was as we have noted, as much cultural as literary: w h a t all these observers missed was a Russian national voice. W h a t it might utter, no one could guess; all the stress was on instrumentality. Once discovered, the voice would find its roles — would learn how, in Gogol's phrase, t o "give us our very selves". Indeed, its authenticity would be proved b y its ability, in one way or another, to do just t h a t . Implicit here is a reconciliation of two practically contrary demands: for a body of original Russian prose t h a t would at the same time a t t r a c t a broad readership and still satisfy the serious literary standards of t h a t elite which was most vigorous in deploring t h e current situation. A class conflict thus underlay literary polemics. For while a literary elite, aristocratic in origin, bemoaned the absence of literature, a p a r t y of literary " t r a d e s m e n " (torgovcy) was nonetheless busy discovering a n d cultivating a large audience, chiefly through the odd-sounding b u t unprecedentedly successful journal, The Library for Reading, founded in 1834 and based, in t h e words of its editor, Senkovskij, on a cynical notion t h a t "literat u r e " consisted of "works t h a t serve as light and pleasant reading", inclining t o t h e domestic, cultural, and political pieties. I n this view, the writer pursued not a calling, b u t a trade; he was a purveyor of innocuous tidbits to the literate masses. 24 21
Poljarnaja zvezda, izdannaja A. Bestuzevym i K. Ryleevym (MoscowLeningrad, 1960), 488, 492. 22 Quoted in N. K. Kozmin, N. K. Nadezdin (St. Petersburg, 1912), 392. 23 Poljarnaja zvezda, 493. 24 "Brambeus i junaja slovesnosf", BiblioteJca dlja ctenija 3 (1834), 36-37.
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If Senkovskij's statement and others like it can be dignified by t h e name of "theory", it is clear t h a t such theorizing was entirely practical in orientation; its very claim to serious attention rested on the fact of his journal's success in discovering a broad, paying readership. What I would suggest about Gogol is t h a t he be viewed in a like manner — t h a t is, from the practical side. His shifting and elusive theories about art and the artist have received a good deal of attention — at the expense of those writings of his which are addressed to the concrete question of the writer vis-à-vis his public. The latter, seldom referred to and long untranslated, are nonetheless key documents in any understanding of Gogol's career and context. Of these, the first is his book, Arabesques (1835) — a "salad", as he called it in a letter, a mixture of everything under the sun. The book is remembered chiefly for the three famous short stories Gogol included in it; it is on occasion cited for the historical lectures it contains, or such rhetorical-allegorical effusions as those on "Sculpture, Painting and Music", and "Life". I n fact, taken as a whole the book appears to be a disguised manifesto, a masked and tentative exploration of problems of effective communication as perceived by a young writer at the time. The censor Nikitenko complained in the same year t h a t Gogol was passing himself off as a universal genius; and indeed what Arabesques generally speaking shows is Gogol's attempt to associate himself with a varied company of geniuses by praising precisely what he took to be central in their accomplishment. His role here is t h a t of the intelligent popularizer; and the essays on teaching history and geography amount to an explicit advocacy of the method he has been practicing in many of the other essays. 25 In "A Few Words about Pushkin", the essay around which the whole collection took shape, Gogol confronts directly the problem of the artist and the public. Here he broaches the question of what an authentically Russian poet would be, and, at the same time, indicates the price of authentic innovation, of taking the ordinary, rather than the extraordinary, as artistic subject. The more familiar the object, he writes, the more 25
For evidence of a contemporary recognition of this among students, see V. V. Stasov, "Uôilisôe Pravovedenija sorok let tomu nazad, 1836-1842 gg.",
Russkaja starina 2 (1881), 415-416.
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one must be a poet in order to draw out of it what is unusual and yet true. Yet such a course, if followed successfully, is "nothing b u t a miscalculation of t h e poet — a miscalculation with respect to his multitudinous public, and not with respect to himself" (VIII, 53-54). Gogol's strategy here is complex. B y appreciating the high artistry of Pushkin's ostensibly simple pieces, he is validating his credentials to belong, in some sense, in the company of the poet (with whom he clearly identified, a n d under whose influence, real or imagined, all his major works were conceived). B u t there is more even t h a n this simultaneous praise a n d boasting; the article as a whole is also a piece of propaganda, designed to change t h e thinking of its readers. ("Criticism based on deep intelligence", he writes elsewhere, "possesses a worth equal to t h a t of any original creation"; it makes the critic "even more p r o m i n e n t " t h a n the writer under discussion [VIII, 175].) Addressed to the reading public a t large, Gogol's essay suggests a new scale of esthetic values b y which conventional public tastes m a y be sensitized anew. This purely practical intent underlies t h e pedagogical articles in this collection as well. Gogol in 1835 was concerned with educating an audience. 26 During this, his Petersburg period, Gogol's most direct practical manifesto was written. I t is a long article, entitled "On the Development of Periodical Literature in 1834 a n d 1835". Threading his way through t h e intense literary polemics of the day, Gogol refuses to condemn t h e new "commercialization" of literature, as represented b y the Library for Reading; recognizing t h a t it indicates a growing demand for literature, especially fiction, he urges rather t h e responsibility of serious writers to satisfy t h a t demand — in t h e first place b y turning to criticism, by sharing their taste a n d awareness. The plea is essentially for t h e deliberate creation of a litera r y culture, b y writers t u r n e d critics. European developments should be discussed in print, a usable Russian past should be marshalled, the Russian present should be explained. (Among the key questions Gogol advances for discussion: " W h y has poetry been replaced b y prose compositions ? A t w h a t stage of development is t h e Russian public, and w h a t is the Russian public ? I n w h a t does 6
Cf. his letter to his mother of 12 April 1835 where, speaking of literature, he comments: "This is a very difficult art! Do you know that in Petersburg, in all Petersburg, there are perhaps only some five individuals who understand the art deeply and truly . . ." (X, 362).
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the originality and distinctive nature of our writers consist?" [VIII, 172].) Summary cannot do justice either to the depth of Gogol's program, or to the shrewd practicality which informs his estimate of the current scene. He had evidently submitted it for publication in the first volume of Pushkin's Contemporary in the hope that it would be taken as a program for that journal. It was not — as Gogol recalled eight years later, in a letter explaining his subsequent literary isolation ("The journal had no definite goal even in [Pushkin's] lifetime"; XII, 438). At about the same time, his hyperbolic hopes for a direct effect on a large audience, in the theater, were disappointed by the premiere of The Inspector General. "The theater is a great school", he had written, "profound is its allotted task \naznacenie~\. To a whole crowd, to a thousand people at once, it reads a vivid, useful lesson" (VIII, 562). When that crowd failed to show it had taken the lesson by evidencing on-thespot moral regeneration — and when critics failed by and large even to discern the lesson — Gogol, a disappointed maximalist, fled abroad to forge in the smithy of his soul the uncreated conscience of his Rus'. The result was the first volume of Dead Souls. Held up by the censorship for an agonizingly long time, threatened not in its "message" but in its artistry,27 the book finally appeared in 1842 — eliciting a batch of reviews as far off the point as Gogol's own remarks about his book were cloudy. The delays of the censorship Gogol chose to see as a test of people's attitudes toward him (XII, 59). He professed to be uninterested in what the critics had to say — but individual readers were a different matter. Certain that they would take his work up as "an engrossing, diverting novel" and drop it in boredom, he nonetheless put his faith in them. After all, he wrote an unknown correspondent in July, 1842, his works were unlike other works "in that everyone can judge them, all my readers without exception, because the objects are taken from the life that circulates around each one . . . I know in advance what
27
See Gogol's letters of early 1842 on official doubts regarding the story of Captain Kopejkin, e.g., XII, 55. Gf. Zhukovsky's comment that in Russia laughter was taken as a sign of sinfulness ("U nas smex prinimajut za grex, sledovatetno, vsjahij nasmesnik dol&en byt velikij gresnik"), N. Barsukov, ¿izn' i trudy M. P. Pogodina, VIII, 4.
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will be printed about me in this journal and that, but the opinions of people who are deeply practical, who know life, who have much experience and much intelligence . . . are more precious to me than bookish theories, which I know by heart" (XII, 82). Here begins the story of Gogol's increasing and quite fantastic attempt to rely directly on his public — with whom, in effect, he proposed what he took to be a mutually advantageous exchange. The public would give him the practical knowledge of Russia he lacked; in return, he would renew the soul and elevate the life of each reader — and so, eventually, of Russia. Queer as the notion of such a bargain may seem, it represents the last stage of Gogol's improvised response to the question of "how to be a writer and what it means to be a writer". Gogol's sense of responsibility as an author, accepted at Pushkin's urging along with the basic idea for Dead Souls, had always pointed two ways: it was a responsibility toward his talent, and also toward his country. By the time the first volume of Dead Souls was completed, it was well on the way to becoming obsessive. (Compare the famous passage in Chapter 11, where he speaks of all eyes in Russia as being on him, and asks, "Russia! what wouldst thou of me, then?" — a passage criticized as showing megalomania; to which he protested that though the expression may have been awkward, the sentiment was sincere.) Belinsky had prematurely called Gogol the head of Russian literature in 1835; two years later Pushkin was dead, and if such a titular office existed, it was clear that Gogol had first claim to it. In 1842 his novel confirmed the fact; Belinsky wrote him privately that he was the sole current hope of Russian literature, and called him publicly "the chief poetic talent" on the contemporary scene.28 In this situation, it is important to note that Gogol's isolation was not only geographical; the lack of competitors was also a lack of colleagues — an isolation unthinkable already by the end of the next decade, when Turgenev, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Goncharov, Saltykov (to mention only the leading figures) had each other to be conscious of — along with a reading public whose tastes and awareness existed in response precisely to that same, shared, pub28
In the letter, of 20 April 1842, Belinsky writes: "You are now T H E O N L Y ONE among us — and m y moral existence, m y love for creative work is closely bound up with your fate; without you, it would be goodbye for me to the present and future of the artistic life of m y homeland."
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lie, cultural consciousness, mediated by a criticism which was itself a cultural force. Gogol, lacking all this, could only turn directly to his reader. This he did publicly in the astonishing preface to the second edition of Dead Souls, published, after the original edition of 2,400 had finally sold out, in 1846. I t begins: "Whoever you may be, my reader, in whatever place, in whatever calling you may find yourself, whether you are distinguished by the highest rank or are a man of the simple class, if God has granted you literacy and if my book has already come into your hands, I ask you to help m e " (VI, 587). The request is for comments, corrections, anecdotes, reminiscences of any kind. Whether one takes this at fact value or accepts Gogol's later allegations of a more devious intent, the fact remains t h a t this is an appeal for help in the form of "statistics" (i.e., facts) about the particularities of a Russian life Gogol had taken as his subject without ever having experienced. " I cannot", he explained, "produce the last volumes of my work until, in some degree, I know Russian life in all its aspects, at least to the extent t h a t I need to know it for my work" (VI, 589). What Gogol conceived as his side of the bargain was delivered virtually simultaneously with his preface: his famous and ill-fated hortatory hodgepodge, Selected Passages from Correspondence with Friends. ("Half of literate Russia", he thought, would read the book.) The most cogent essays are those concerned with writing; rereading them in 1887, Tolstoy singled them out as an excellent statement of "what literature should be", and found "the significance of the writer in general. . . defined there in a way t h a t cannot be bettered". 2 9 For present purposes, the most important piece in the book is also the sanest (and longest) — an article he said he had tried unsuccessfully to write at three previous periods of his career, "What, Finally, Is the Essence of Russian Poetry, and in What I t s Peculiarity Consists". Here Gogol is responding to his own call of ten years before, in which he urged Russian writers and poets to take up criticism — to identify a tradition, educate a public, to help create, in effect, the missing institution. I n what may be the most perceptive and nuanced sketch of its development to date, Gogol demonstrates clearly how outdated are the com29
L. N . Tolstoj, Polnoe Moscow, 1936), 874.
sobranie
socinenij
(Jubilejnoe izdanie), t.
26
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plaints of fifteen years before about the nonexistence of a Russian literature. I t exists unquestionably — b u t it has not yet managed "either to teach society, or to express i t " (VIII, 403). His conclusion, clear-sighted a n d non-prescriptive, is t h a t "neither Pushkin nor anyone else should stand as a model for us: different times have already come" (VIII, 407). H e closes with a vision of a new literature which, by expressing Russia, will unite Russians in a recognition t h a t they are "really a t home . . . and not in a foreign l a n d " (VIII, 409). Beyond this vision Gogol was not fated to go. As one Russian critic observed later in t h e century, he was a typical representative of his age, not only in the works he produced, b u t also in w h a t he strove so long to produce — and could not. His late search for " f a c t s " was vain, because he renounced t h e very operations by which his genius h a d earlier turned " f a c t s " (objects, gestures landscapes) into comic art: exaggeration, absurd juxtaposition, cloudy (because shifting) point of view. "Different times have already come": he was right: t h a t extraordinary intuition which had made his earlier writings so extraordinarily a p t an expression of an age of expectation still served him — a n d he foresaw accurately t h e advent of a mirroring literature, one based on " t r u t h to life". His loneliness was more t h a n personal, and deeper t h a n t h a t which every original artist knows, for it included the awful loneliness of the initiator of a tradition — a tradition t h a t would ignore t h e nature of his successes to fulfil the program of his failures. Philip R a h v , in an article of some years ago emphasizing Gogol "as a peculiarly modern instance of the literary artist", nonetheless felt obliged to insist t h a t "it is impossible to abstract Gogol from his historical moment". 3 0 The contradiction, I submit, is only apparent — and t h e insight is a key one: it suggests t h e important nature of correspondences within the Gogol problem. They functioned, in his own time, to produce a recognition of his greatness — though one based on a misapprehension of his work; and t h e y remain to be pursued today, in the effort to explore the f u n d a m e n t a l nature of t h a t work, and of the whole Gogol phenomenon. The key t o R a h v ' s paradox, for example, is t h e correspondence between Gogol's unique response to his historic situation a n d t h a t 30
"Gogol aa a Modern Instance", in Donald Davie, ed., Russian and Modem English Fiction (Chicago, 1965), 239, 243.
Literature
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of later artists (all over Europe) to the "modern" situation which is still our own. In both cases we find a concern with the radical possibility of literature; his age felt it because it looked forward to an efflorescence, and ours because it looks back to one which seems to have run its course. Thus the more we understand the Gogolian context, the more relevant his case seems to modern experience, for which the problem has arisen again of how to be a writer, and what it may mean to be a writer. The most original and the greatest of Gogol's works — such works as "Ivan Fedorovió Spon'ka and his Auntie", the story of the two Ivans, "The Nose", The Inspector General, "The Overcoat", Dead Souls — tend in varying degrees to be problematic, not in the realistic sense that they depict problems, but in the more "modern" sense that they constitute problems. In The Dehumanization of Art (for which Gogol might have served as a particularly interesting illustration), Ortega spells out the distinction I want to emphasize: "Not only", he writes, "is grieving and rejoicing at such human destinies as a work of art presents or narrates a very different thing from true artistic pleasure, but preoccupation with the human content of the work is in principle incompatible with aesthetic enjoyment proper". "Artistic forms proper" he observes, " — figments, fantasy — are tolerated only if they do not interfere with the perception of human forms and fates. As soon as purely aesthetic elements predominate and the story of John and Mary grows elusive, most people feel at a loss what to make of the scene, the book, or the painting."31 Compare the ending of "The Nose", a story that tells of the mysterious loss and no less mysterious recovery of a self-important official's olfactory organ — which uses its brief freedom to impersonate a State Councillor. On the last page the narrator steps forward to acknowledge a few of the improbabilities of his tale, and to observe, for and with his reader: "But what is strangest of all, what is most incomprehensible, is that authors can take up such subjects. I confess, that is completely unfathomable, it's like . . . no, no, I can't understand it at all. . ." The artifice of the literary work could hardly be proclaimed more openly. Comparable examples abound in the works I have mentioned. Jose Ortega y Gasset, The Dehumanization Art and. Culture (Garden City, 1956), 9. 31
of Art and Other Writings on
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Gogol asserts in Chapter 7 of Dead Souls t h a t " a great deal of spiritual depth is required to throw light upon a picture taken from a despised stratum of life, and to exalt it into a pearl of creation". Elsewhere he repeats the phrase; it is one of his favorites. "Pearl of creation": he could not have found an apter image for his own practice. For like pearls, his works were produced and polished b y a process of gradual accretion and embellishment, their starting point often the most minimal situation "from a despised stratum of life". His characters do not develop; they are progressively revealed through the addition of another and yet another translucent, nacreous layer. These layers are verbal. Words which seem to represent things in fact do more; they transmute them. The word, Gogol said, is "God's highest gift to man". "One marvels at how precious our language is: every sound is a gift; everything is grainy, tangible (krupno), like the pearl itself, and indeed it may happen that the name is even more precious than the thing itself."( VIII, 279). Thus his notebooks abound not in observations or situations, b u t in lists of words, names of objects or activities or people, whose attraction lay in some arresting power of association or simple sonority. His gift was for combining them. Rozanov noted what Belyj was later to analyze. Claiming a profound subversive effect for the story of Captain Kopejkin, which he said robbed the war with Napoleon of all its authentic grandeur — and t h a t without any sneering or scoffing — he explains: these are "pages like other pages. Only the words are somehow set up in a special way [Tol'Ico leak-to slovecki postavleny osobenno\ How they are set u p is a secret known to Gogol alone. For him words \slovecki~\ were some sort of immortal spirits; somehow each little word knew how to say what it had to, and do what it had to. And once it's gotten inside the reader's skull, you can't get t h a t word out with steel pincers." 32 This skill — as George Ivask has observed — is shared by most of the vulgarians — poSljaki — who populate his pages, their " h u m a n " insignificance redeemed by the fact t h a t they are great wordsmiths [velikie slovesniki]. Language, concrete and seemingly familiar, but presented in astonishing and unprecedented combina-
32
Quoted in V. V. Veresaev, Kah rahotal Gogol (Moscow, 1934), 76.
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FÄNGER
tions, is the real hero of his works; and the range of possibility he discovered has yet to be exhausted by his successors.33 Thus the phrase which Sestov applied to Chekhov's work — "creation out of nothing" — seems in fact much more applicable to Gogol's. The reader who looks to him for lessons learned or illustrated, for experiential value of some kind, is bound to be baffled. For Gogol's most memorable characters seldom aspire, achieve, change, or learn. Their stories as such are, as Gogol himself recognized, exhibitions; they are also, as Boris Ejxenbaum pointed out, performances. And it is in the brilliance of the narrative performance, in the management of those grainy words, so much more valuable than the things they designate, t h a t we in fact find a peculiar problematics. J u s t as it is there, if anywhere, t h a t we must pursue the question of the sense or import of each work. We struggle not to understand but simply to picture Major Kovalev's nose as it reprimands him with a frown in the Kazan Cathedral; in the same way we struggle to picture Akakij Akakievic — and cannot get past the obtrusive syntax: "a clerk of whom it could not be said t h a t he was very remarkable, shortish in height, rather pockmarkedish, rather reddish-haired, rather even purblindish to look at, with a small bald spot on his forehead [!], with wrinkles along both sides of his cheeks [!], and a face of the color t h a t is called hemorrhoidal." Gogol himself, in short, supplies the temptation to speak of his words as if they referred to nothing outside themselves; t h a t is, to no system outside their own. They do, of course, have external referents; and they do "say something" about the Russia of his time. But not directly. If Nabokov is wrong to deny any important connection with what Russians so confidently refer to as "reality", he errs no more than Belinsky did in finding Gogol's representation of t h a t reality faithful in every particular. Here again the concept of correspondences can be of use.
33
The point is made in a suggestive article by Jurij Ivask, "Literaturnye zametki", Mosty 6 (1968), 171-180. Cf. Victor Erlich's admirable formulation: "In this lifeless, Stagnant universe, language is the only active protagonist, the only dynamic force, both as a great impersonator of dismal reality and as a major avenue of eseape from it". (Gogol [New H a v e n and London, 1969], 221).
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Form and content, often hard to distinguish clearly, show in Gogol's work a particular tendency to merge; which is to say t h a t theme and technique become quite inextricably fused. The technique is not simply the best way to express a theme; it is the only way. Consider the ending of Dead Souls, where Cicikov's carriage abruptly yields place to another, which soars away into the distance: And art thou not, too, Russia, Soaring along like a nimble troika that is not to be overtaken? The road smokes under thee, the bridges thunder, everything falls back and remains behind . . . Russia ! Whither then art thou rushing ? Give answer. It gives no answer. The bell pours out a wondrous ringing; the air, torn to pieces, thunders and becomes wind. Everything on earth flies past and, gazing askance, all other peoples and nations stand aside and yield the right of way.
The technique here is evasion — but now openly expressed as theme. Moreover, the technique, which has been to emphasize meaninglessness and absurdity, turns t h a t emphasis around in this closing passage with a rhetorical question that promises an answer, and a sense, in the future . . . From this nexus, the correspondences go in two directions: toward Gogol as creator, and toward the effect of his creation on his contemporary audience. The thematic cluster here — which could be matter for a separate essay — is perhaps the central one in Gogol: road/evasion/metamorphosis. In his letters, Gogol continually stresses the special importance which the road had for him personally. " I absolutely need the road." " I am counting heavily on the road." M. Cabanes, in his book Grands névropathes, sees this as "the blood of the Cossacks, of the wandering adventurer", showing itself in "sudden burst[s] of atavism". 34 Gogol knew better. "The road", he said, "is my only medicine". "The road saved me." "My creative capacity is only too connected with this [sudden need to travel]" — " a need which I cannot explain to myself", but on which his health, "spiritual and physical", depended. The urge to flight may have meant different things at different times — flight from himself (Gogol), or from "his own vision of things" (Belyj) — but the common impulse was towards freedom from fixity, definition, accountability. 35 34
Auguste Cabanès, Grands névropathes III (Paris, 1935), 248. X I , 315, 319, 325; XII, 29; X , 148; Andrej Belyj, Masterstvo (Moscow-Leningrad, 1934), 181.
35
Gogolja
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DONALD FANGER
This theme recurs in a great many of the works, and gives a number of them their endings: the two Ivans, "The P o r t r a i t " , "Diary of a Madman", Marriage (where Podkolesin jumps out a window), The Inspector General (where Xlestakov, "a phantasmagoric figure . . . like a false, personified deception, is carried away together with the troika God knows where" [IV, 118]) — and, as we have seen, Dead Souls. B u t the road functions in yet another way for Gogol: as cultural metaphor. In Dead Souls: " W h a t tortuous, out-of-the-way, narrow, impassible roads, leading far off to the side, has mankind chosen for itself in its aspiration to achieve eternal t r u t h . . . " How many times, he exclaims, has it followed will-of-the-wisps up to the very edge of the abyss, "only to ask each other then with horror: 'Where is the way out, where is the roadV " (VI, 210-211). His sense of the cultural situation in the late forties was expressed in the notion t h a t "the world is on the move [literally, on the road], and not at a resting place" [mir v doroge, a ne u pristani] (VIII, 455). The terms are astonishingly vague — and seem to reflect accurately Gogol's very uncertain knowledge of the Russian scene. Indeed, Vengerov created something of a scandal in 1913 when he published an article entitled, "Gogol Absolutely Did Not Know Real Russian Life" [Oogot soverSenno ne znal realnoj russkoj zizni], in which he demonstrated t h a t the author of Dead Souls had spent a total of only forty-nine days in the Russian provinces, most of them inside a carriage I36 This was scandalous because most readers continued to assert, with Herzen and Belinsky, t h a t Gogol had given a faithful depiction of provincial life — when in fact what he was doing was evading lifelike proportions and clarity of statement to body forth an emptiness, a collection of illusions, at best a virtuality. And the very resourcefulness of the bodying-forth turned out to have the greatest possible public validity. His ignorance of Russia, his lack of personal experience, his avoidance of the unsolved problems of literary form — all turned out to be positive. Because the brilliance of his linguistic performance and the sureness of his symbolic intuitions made manifest and palpable the absences so many of the intelligentsia were deploring — and so, in a sense, destroyed "
S. A. Vengerov, PisateZ-gra&danin. Gogol (Saint Petersburg, 1913).
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them, turned them into a paradoxical presence, capable of provoking further developments. 37 Belyj p u t it well: if Russian prose literature — which subsumed so much of intellectual life in the nineteenth century — began with Pushkin, it took off with Gogol. His work was more hailed than examined in his own time — which is understandable. And it offered the grounds for its own speedy supersession — by a new generation of writers who would deal with the problems he could only foresee, subordinating his lyricism and irony to the investigation of experience, and elaborating in practice the model of the Russian writer which he could only proclaim. (There is another set of correspondences to be worked out in this connection — b u t t h a t is matter for another occasion.) What I have tried to suggest in these fragmentary remarks is that there is an alternative to asking the usual (and usually unanswerable) questions about Gogol: what did he read? was he a realist or a symbolist? what was his illness? how genuinely religious was he ? and so on. Specifically, my suggestion is t h a t if we seek instead to identify all the constituent elements of the Gogol problem as such — historical and stylistic, contextual and immanent, absences and presences — the patterns they reveal may go far toward constituting an answer to the riddle of his existence, in the past as in the present. Harvard University
37
See D. N. Ovsjaniko-Kulikovskij, "Gogol i ljudi Sorokovyx godov", in his Istorija russkoj intelligencii, I (Moscow, 1908), for a perceptive discussion of this problem.
CATHEDRAL FOLK: APOTHEOSIS OF ORTHODOXY OR ITS DOOMSDAY BOOK? HUGH McLEAN
In the years 1866-1872, while he was writing Cathedral Folk and its various antecedents, Leskov was intermittently aware that he had undertaken something far more lasting and significant than his "anti-nihilist" novels. However passionate he felt, at the time he wrote them, about No Way Out, The By-passed, and later At Daggers Drawn, and however convinced he was of their historical truth and moral Tightness, at bottom Leskov knew perfectly well that they were not major works of art. They were, as he said of No Way Out, "hasty, journalistic jobs".1 Yet he, too, like all his contemporaries, was deeply influenced by two characteristic mid-nineteenthcentury notions — or perhaps we would prefer to call them prejudices — which led him to expend so much effort for such meagre artistic results. These were, first, the "ideology prejudice", still rampant in the Soviet Union, according to which the most important thing about a work of literature is not its artistic quality, but its political or philosophical "line"; and second, the "size prejudice", according to which sheer bulk is regarded as a measure of artistic importance and seriousness. All his life and even to this day Leskov's reputation has suffered from this latter idea. A writer is to be judged by his "major efforts", i.e., his longest and most substantial works. In Leskov's case this meant his big novels; these novels were obviously second-rate; and therefore Leskov could be safely pigeon-holed as a second-rate, minor writer, "very close to Melnikov and on a level with Avdeev", as one critic put it as late as 1891 — an absurd misestimate typical of the period.2 Leskov 1
[N. S. Leskov] , "Ob"jasnenie g. Stebnickogo", Biblioteka dlja itenija 12
(December, 1864), 1. * M. A . Protopopov, "Bol'noj talant", Russkaja mysl 12 (December, 1891), 266. Pavel Melnikov (1819-1883), Leskov's "tutor" in matters regarding the Old Believers, was the author of bulky "ethnographic" novels (written
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might be credited with a few pretty good short stories, but no one could buy his way to top artistic rank with such small change. Yet there was one work t h a t was different, one that could not be written off as another No Way Out or At Daggers Drawn. I t was bulky enough to qualify as a heavyweight, yet shared the artistic quality of "Lady Macbeth" or "The Battle-axe". That work, of couse, was Cathedral Folk. Cathedral Folic is probably the only one of Leskov's LONG works t h a t on its own merits can be ranked as an indisputable classic. For t h a t very reason, it has perhaps been rated even higher by Leskov's friends and defenders than it deserves. Especially in an age dominated by giant novels, it was comforting for Leskov's advocates, and for Leskov himself, to have at least one large success to point to, one universally acknowledged big monument with which its author's name could be linked as a kind of appellative: Leskov, the author of Cathedral Folk, t h a t "magnificent book", as Maksim Gor'kij called it. 3 But now, with the perspective of a century of time and the fact of several lofty reputations, such as Maupassant's or Chekhov's, resting on short stories rather than novels, we may find ourselves, as Leskovian advocates, able to do our author full honors without pinning them all on Cathedral Folk. And we may even be willing to concede t h a t this novel does not quite rank among Leskov's very best works.
under the pseudonym Andrej Pecerskij) which try to get the maximum artistic mileage out of Russian couleur locale. The best known are In the Woods (V lesax, 1871-1875) and On the Mountains (Na gorax, 1875-1881). Although still remembered, reprinted, and read, Melnikov is hardly a major light among the Russian literary luminaries of the nineteenth century. Mixail Avdeev (1821-1876) is a now almost totally forgotten novelist and critic who made an ephemeral splash in 1860 with a novel called Underwater Stone (Podvodnyj kamen'), which dealt daringly with the titillating topic of free love. 3 In his introduction to Leskov's Izbrannye proizvedenija I (only volume published; Berlin, 1923), 9. Gor'kij's admiration for Leskov has naturally been the subject of several Soviet scholarly efforts; and Gor'kij's endorsement has frequently been used — not always successfully — as a kind of lever to push the dubiously reactionary and religious Leskov through the Soviet censorship. See, among others, B. M. Drugov, "A. M. Gor'kij o Leskove", Literatumaja u&eba 6 (June, 1941), 21-43; L. P. Grossman, N. S. Leskov (Moscow, 1945); D. K. Muratova, "Gor'kij i Leskov", Voprosy izucenija russkoj literatury XI-XX vekov (Moscow-Leningrad, 1958), 253-259; and N. S. Plescunov, Romany Leskova "Nekuda" i "Soborjane" (Baku, 1963).
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However t h a t may be, Cathedral Folk is indisputably a big book, and it is certainly a good, if not a great, one. The author had ample reason to regard it with special fondness. " I love my Dwellers in God's House so much t h a t I am ready to fuss over them again and again", he wrote in 1871, undiscouraged by the many trials he had undergone in trying to get the book published. "For the sake of your love of art and the idea of art, bestow your love on my Dwellers and take care of them. I place my greatest hopes in them." 4 Much later, when translations of Cathedral Folk began to appear in Western languages, Leskov felt confirmed in his special affection for this foremost among his offspring. "Axilla is opening for me the doors into European literature", he wrote in 1886.5 Leskov continued to take pride in the artistic quality of Cathedral Folk long after he had repudiated, as we shall see, its ideology. There is another, extra-literary and cognitive reason for the popularity of Cathedral Folk. I t is one of the few works in all Russian literature t h a t deals seriously, and from an insider's point of view, with the Orthodox Church — an institution obviously crucial in the nation's spiritual culture, b u t strangely neglected by its writers. Received as it was with great applause and gratitude in ecclesiastical circles, Cathedral Folk has come to be regarded as in some sense the apotheosis in Russian literature of the Orthodox clergy, t h a t forgotten class, so much despised and so little understood by the atheistic intellectuals of the capitals. Revile and scorn it as the intellectuals might, the Orthodox Church was nevertheless historically the most authentic cultural voice of the Russian people, the repository of its aspirations, its ideals, and its art. If you wanted to comprehend the soul of Russia, you had first to understand its religious life. The chief representatives and spokesmen of Orthodoxy in Cathedral Folk are, of course, t h a t contrasting but wonderfully integrated trio of "dwellers" in the Old Town cathedral: Father Savelij Tuberozov, the thoughtful and courageous, if sometimes bull-headed, 4
Letters to P. K. Sfiebal'skij of June 8 and October 7, 1871, in N. S. Leskov, Sobranie socinenij, ed. V. G. Bazanov and others (Moscow, 1956-1958), X , 329; 335. (Hereafter references to this edition are given by volume and page
number only.) Dwellers in God's House (Bozedomy) was the title of an early
version of Cathedral Folk (Soborjane), partly published in Literaturnaja biblioteka 1 and 2 (January-February, 1868). Letter to S. N. Subinskij of June 17, 1886 (XI, 320).
s
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archpriest; Zaxarija Benefaktov, Tuberozov's subordinate, the very concentrated essence of gentleness and self-abnegation ; and most picturesque, if not most admirable of all, Deacon Axilla Desnicyn, a kind of living oxymoron, the "Cossack in a cassock", a man of giant physique and enormous strength, born to ride the steppes like a warrior of old, doing battle with his Tsar's enemies, who finds himself incongrously clad in a clerical gown and living in the prosaic, small-spirited, and over-civilized nineteenth century. The first among this trio of divines, and the principal protagonist of Cathedral Folk, is Savelij Tuberozov. With respect to Father Zaxarija and Axilla, an element of condescension, and, in Axilla's case, of benevolent amusement as well, is built into our attitude as Leskov manipulates it: they are not our equals. B u t toward Savelij condescension is hardly possible. I t must be realized t h a t for a Russian reader of t h a t time, i.e., a member of the nineteenthcentury Russian cultural elite, to view an Orthodox priest as an equal demanded a real spiritual revolution. Two conventional attitudes toward the clergy were possible: condescending benevolence if you were a believer, or contemptuous hostility if you were not; but equality — hardly. Even educated Russians who took their religion seriously and revered their priests as instruments of God still found it hard to respect them as men. And indeed they seldom deserved respect: it was only too true t h a t the average Russian village or even town priest was abysmally ignorant, poor, obsequious toward the gentry, grasping toward his peasant parishioners, dirty, unkempt, and frequently addicted to drink. But such a typical pop, beaten down, over-humble, and mindless, would hardly do as the protagonist of a long novel apparently designed to show the living spirit of Christianity still burning bright in Russian Orthodoxy. Leskov was therefore obliged to create a figure admittedly idealized and atypical: a priest such as he would like all Russian priests to be, intelligent, well-read, thoughtful, warm-hearted, and courageous in his pursuit of t r u t h and righteousness. Such is Savelij Tuberozov. The danger in any such idealization, of course, is t h a t the resulting character may turn out to be neither believable ("Who ever heard of a priest like t h a t ? " ) or even attractive — virtuous characters in literature have an almost irresistible tendency to turn into unbearable prigs. B u t in Savelij Tuberozov Leskov successfully wrought the miracle: his idealized priest is on the whole both believable and likeable.
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One of Leskov's most important techniques for internalizing our view of Tuberozov is the inclusion of his diary, or "Demicoton Book", which occupies a large portion of the first half of the novel. This diary has been greatly admired, both in Leskov's day and later, and it certainly is a stylistic tour de force, the very quintessence of a priest's Russian, with its dense concentration of archaisms, Slavonicisms, ecclesiasticisms, and Scriptural quotations. For all its stylistic virtuosity, however, I do feel t h a t this diary is partly flawed by a kind of Victorian sentimentality to which we are somehow less tolerant than our great-grandfathers were. (That doesn't mean we're better; only t h a t we have other ways of deluding ourselves.) However, I am not going to analyze either the style or the sentimentality here. From the point of view of our understanding of Orthodoxy, an additional disappointment in Tuberozov's diary is the limited view it gives us of the priest's inner life, and his religious life in particular. Neither in the intimacy of the diary, nor at any other point in the novel, do we really see Father Tuberozov, either as man or as priest, in direct relations with his God. We see his Christianity and his Church only as a social, human institution, as a moral force among men in this world, not as a means of contact with the next. The "real presence" of none of the Orthodox deities — God the Father, Jesus, the Holy Ghost, the Virgin, the saints — is felt in the book; and the characters hardly undergo any religious, as distinct from ethical, experiences. Although we learn a greal deal about Father Tuberozov's view of the Church and his program for its reform — his ecclesiastical sociology, so to speak — we find out nothing about his theology or metaphysics. Nor do we ever see him, even externally, in his magic sacerdotal roles — not at the supreme moment in the Eucharist when the apostolic power he wields transforms humble bread and wine into the Body and Blood of Christ, nor, for t h a t matter, at any other moment in the liturgy. Nor do we ever see him in the Confessional, exercising the awesome power vested in him to absolve men of their sins. Instead, our most powerful impression of Savelij in the Church is his performance as a preacher, delivering sermons t h a t burn the hearts of men, until the hierarchy seals his lips. Thus to treat the sermon as the pastor's central religious act is, of course, essentially a Protestant, not an Orthodox position, the more so since Tuberozov's sermons are focussed on moral issues facing his parish-
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ioners in this world, not on their relations with God. However praiseworthy such sermons m a y be, they cannot be regarded, f r o m an Orthodox point of view, as a fulfillment of a priest's most basic function. F o r in Orthodoxy, as in R o m a n Catholicism, the most vital mission of the Church, and of the priest within it, is not to seek t h e amelioration of this sinful world, b u t t o save souls. And while salvation always rests as a discretionary power, so t o speak, in t h e hands of God, H e has granted His Church certain means t o promote t h a t salvation, to increase its probability. Chief among these means are t h e Sacraments. And of Sacraments there is scarcely a mention in all of Cathedral Folk. Indeed, in this ostensibly ultra-Orthodox novel, the author in fact exhibits some markedly un-Orthodox, inherently Protestant ideas a n d attitudes. I n view of this latent Protestantism lurking in t h e very heart of Cathedral Folk, it will seem less surprising, less startlingly inconsistent t o f i n d its author, only three years a f t e r its publication, repudiating this book a n d t h e Church which it h a d idealized. 6 The germ of t h e repudiation was already present in t h e idealization. I n fact, Leskov's allegiance to Orthodoxy was always a qualified one. A letter of 1871, written in direct connection with Cathedral Folk, contains the most forthright statement of personal allegiance to t h e Church Leskov ever wrote: I am not an enemy of the Church, but her friend, or rather I am her humble and devoted son and a convinced Orthodox — I do not wish to vilify her; I wish her honorable progress out of the Stagnation into which she has fallen, crushed by her involvement with the State. 7
In a letter to his friend Sfiebal'skij during this trip to Europe in 1875 (July 29/August 10), Leskov wrote: "I will say only one thing, that if I had read everything on this subject [religion] that I have read now, and heard everything I have heard, I would not have written Cathedral Folk as it is written . . . I do have, however, a hankering to write about a Russian heretic — an intelligent, well read, and freethinking spiritual Christian, who has passed through all sorts of hesitations in his search for Christ's truth and has found it only in his own soul. I would call such a story "Fornosov the Heretic", and I would publish i t . . . Where would I publish it?" (X, 412). There is an illuminating discussion of Leskov's readings and religious crisis in William B. Edgerton, "Leskov's Trip Abroad in 1875", Indiana Slavic Studies IV (Bloomington, 1967), 88-99. ' Letter to P. K. Sdebal'skij of June 8, 1871 (X, 329).
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Yet if we examine this statement closely, its negative features stand out far more than its positive ones. Not only does it begin significantly, not with an assertion of devotion, b u t with a denial of enmity, b u t the whole tone is rather critical and condescending. The Church is judged as a kind of fallen woman, locked in the sinful embrace of the state and sunk in the slough of stagnation. This Church's son may be devoted, but he is hardly humble and certainly not blind to her faults. 8 Essentially the view of the Orthodox Church Leskov presents in Cathedral Folk is t h a t of a sympathetic Protestant outsider: an outsider who repudiates entirely t h a t Church's own conception of its most crucial mission (the promotion of salvation through sacraments), but tactfully refrains from dwelling on this disagreement. Largely ignoring the whole question of the Church in eternity, t h e Church as a vital intermediary between man and God, Leskov instead concentrates on the concrete social situation of the Church here below, its strengths and weaknesses, its enemies and its friends in the Russian reality of his time. And the picture he paints of this situation is a stark and gloomy one indeed. H e shows us a Church so beset by external enemies and so undermined by its own internal flaws and weaknesses t h a t its chances of mere survival, let alone revival, appear very dark. I t now seems strange, in fact, t h a t Cathedral Folk should have been so enthusiastically received by the Russian clergy and the Orthodox faithful as a great moral boost to their cause from the side of secular literature. 9 Quite apart from its Protestantism, Cathedral Folk reads more like the Doomsday Book of Orthodoxy. As shown in the novel, there were two principal enemies confronting the Church from without in the mid-nineteenth century. The first was the enemy "from below", irrational b u t historic, still an enormous barrier to spiritual union between the official Orthodox Church and the whole Russian people, namely, the Old Belief, to which millions of simple Russians remained fanatically devoted.
• On Leskov's relation to the Church, see the excellent dissertation by Brigitte Macher, "Nikolai Leskovs Verhältnis zur Orthodoxie" (Marburg, 1952). 9 See, e.g., the long anonymous article, "Nase duxovenstvo po belletristiieskim proizvedenijam", Pravoslavnoe obozrenie 1 (January, 1872), 73-105; 304-333. It is devoted entirely to an enthusiastic review of Soborjane.
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The second was the enemy "from above": the secularism and atheism widespread among the educated classes, an atheism which in its most radical form professed a total rejection of the Church as an outmoded, intellectually stultifying, and socially repressive institution. Leskov originally planned to demonstrate both these assaults on the Church in his novel, integrating them as fundamental conflicts in his plot. I n practice, however, they proved too diverse to bring together satisfactorily. The theme of the Old Belief, which was evidently destined to play a major part in the original "Waiting for the Moving of the Water", 1 0 is gradually crowded into the background b y the more current and, to intellectual readers, much more meaningful subject of atheism. In the novel the schism is relegated to the past, to the early portions of Tuberozov's diary, while the confrontation with atheism is acted out in the "present", i.e., the 1860's. Despite the withdrawal of emphasis from the Old Belief, Leskov manages very well to demonstrate what he considers the essential moral dilemma of the official Church in relation to the schismatics, and his own strong opposition to official policy. As he points out in the letter quoted above, the central moral fault of the Orthodox Church, its principal source of weakness in all its undertakings — not only its relations with the Old Believers — lay in its unholy alliance with the state. According to the Church, the Old Believers were heretics, their salvation jeopardized by their separation from the apostolic Church; according to the state, they were seditionists and rebels, a source of political danger against whom defensive measures were required. This "defense", of course, meant persecution. And since the Church was itself a state institution, it was easy for the two concepts to become fused, and for the Church to become the agent, or at least a collaborator, in the persecution. To his credit, Leskov was and remained throughout his life a vehement opponent of religious persecution in any form and in the early parts of Tuberozov's diary he graphically demonstrates the disastrous effects of this official policy. As always, persecution saps the moral strength of the persecutors and intensifies the resistance of the persecuted. As a capable and promising young priest, 10
Another of the early titles of Soborjane (a quotation from John 5 : 3 ) . "OajusCie dviienija vody", Otedestvennye zapiski 6, 7, and 8 (March 15April 15, 1867).
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Tuberozov had purposely been sent to Old Town, known as a hotbed of the Old Belief, in order to carry on more vigorously the struggle with the schism. But experience soon teaches Savelij that no "struggle", at least on terms morally acceptable to him, is possible. What the authorities want is for him to keep up a steady stream to headquarters of forceful donosy, i.e., for him to "finger" active Old Believers with sufficient damaging details so that they can be prosecuted. What Tuberozov wants is to engage in missionary work, i.e., to endeavor to reconvert the schismatics by the force of reason and moral example. He knows well that the moment he collaborates in any police persecutions, all potential moral influence he might have among the Old Believers will immediately be lost. He refuses to be an informer. The result is a head-on collision between him and his superiors, ecclesiastical and secular; and in the end the power of their authority proves stronger than the will of one man. First, Tuberozov is forbidden, on pain of demotion or even arrest, to engage in his most cherished missionary project, a series of public discussion meetings with leading Old Believers about their theological and liturgical differences. Similarly, Tuberozov tries to resist the time-honored, but to him morally repugnant, custom according to which, at Easter time, the Orthodox clergy made the rounds of schismatic households and collected "donations" — actually a kind of bribe or tribute which more or less bought the donors immunity from clerical denunciations and persecution. These gifts formed an important part of the Orthodox clergy's annual income; and it was no wonder that the deacon — Axilla's predecessor — was so incensed by Tuberozov's prohibition of the practice that he in turn denounced Savelij to the authorities for secretly abetting the Old Belief, even though Tuberozov had paid the deacon his expected tribute out of his own meager funds. The climax of the government's — for it is hardly the Church's — campaign against the schismatics is the forcible demolition of their chapel. As the chapel was being pulled down by soldiers, an iron cross from the cupola symbolically came loose and hung on a chain; then, "being enragedly urged by the hooks of the destroyers toward falling", 11 it suddenly broke away and fell on the head of one of the soldiers, killing him. The fact that this soldier proved to be a Jew, 11
Budu&i ostervenenno ponuzdaem bagrami razoritelej k padeniju —• a good
example of Tuberozov's sacerdotal Russian.
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and t h a t the Christian Russian government was thus revealed to be sending Jewish soldiers to pull down schismatic Christian crosses — this anomaly incenses Tuberozov far more than the fate of the unfortunate victim. 12 And the persecution, as was to be expected, arouses sympathy among the Orthodox population for their schismatic brethren and indignation against the government's brutality; likewise, the Old Believers' dedication to their faith is only intensified by their sufferings. They march through the streets of Old Town singing "Pharaoh the tormentor". Completely immobilized in his missionary efforts by the authorities' rigid insistence on a policy of persecution, Tuberozov eventually gives up any thought of "struggling" with the Old Belief. Gradually he learns to live with it according to the old, traditional patterns, under which persecution is somewhat mitigated, not by any formal relaxation or enlightenment of policy, but by the inefficiency and corruption of the system. At last Tuberozov sinks low enough to participate in the annual collection of Easter tribute. As he rationalizes his surrender, it is no use kicking against the goads. 13 And with Tuberozov's moral collapse, the whole subject of the Old Belief slides out of the novel. 14 The confrontation between the Church and secular rationalism was, of course, a more potent subject than the Old Belief, not only 12 The idea of making this soldier a Jew was an afterthought on Leskov's part, added to the 1872 version, perhaps with the aim of pleasing his antiSemite publisher, Katkov. There is no mention of the soldier's religion either in the Cajus&ie dviienija vody or the Bozedomy versions of the diary. 13 Intimidated by the charge of a student who read this article in manuscript that I was stooping to "gutter language", I cite this phrase (Acts 9 : 5) in the Revised rather than the Authorized version. 14 In the early drafts of Bozedomy Leskov invoked directly the figure of Avvakum, the great seventeenth-century leader of the Old Believers and himself a writer with a very "Leskovian" feel for the Russian language. With his indomitable intransigeance and courage in the face of persecution, Avvakum was to be a moral model for Tuberozov, even appearing to him in a vision during Tuberozov's "transfiguration" scene. In the published versions of Soborjane, however, all direct references to Avvakum have been eliminated — possibly because of the censorship, either of Katkov or of the government, possibly because the paradox seemed too extreme of an Old Believer providing moral guidance to an Orthodox campaigner against the Old Belief. See I. Z. Serman, "Protopop Avvakum v tvordestve N. S. Leskova", Trudy Otdela drevnerusskoj literatury Akademii nauk SSSB X I V (Moscow-Leningrad, 1958), 404-407.
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more interesting in personal terms to the majority of Leskov's readers — for whom Old Believers were almost as remote as Hottentots — b u t ultimately of much deeper general significance. Under the aspect of eternity, the conflict between official Orthodoxy and the Old Belief was a local, transient, and somewhat technical issue, of little interest outside its social and historical context. But in the conflict of the Church with secularism and atheism, it was not the future of Orthodoxy, b u t of Christianity itself t h a t was in question. Obviously the crisis of Christianity (and other religions as well) in modern times has resulted not from sectarianism or schism, b u t from the defection of a large part of the cultural elite. I t was partly because of the peculiar intellectual and social weaknesses of their church t h a t the Russians were among the first to perceive this threat in its full dimensions: in the nineteenth century, at least, Orthodoxy had few friends among Russian intellectuals. And in all world literature the crisis of faith is nowhere more powerfully expressed than in the novels of Dostoevsky and Tolstoy. The same, unfortunately, can hardly be said of the representation of this conflict in Leskov's Cathedral Folk. H e cannot match either the cosmic, metaphysical sweep of his great contemporaries, or their emotional intensity. H e shows us no Konstantin Levin or Ivan Karamazov wrestling agonizingly with the "accursed questions" of the existence of God and the moral order of the universe. Instead, this whole great theme, the Armageddon of faith and atheism, is both externalized and trivialized. First of all, there is the typically childish, propagandistic equation of faith with morality. The "good" believers, the clergy and the faithful, are lined up on one side of the moral barricade, and the wicked atheists arrayed on the other. Moreover, the battles t h a t take place across this barricade are mostly reduced to the level of humorous anecdote. Leskov never sees, as Dostoevsky did, t h a t the truly significant battle is not the external struggle in the world between atheists and Christians, b u t the internal conflict between faith and unfaith in the hearts of individuals who feel attracted and repelled by both. Apart from some rather ludicrous "doubts" acquired by the completely unintellectual Axilla during a trip to Petersburg, of which Tuberozov easily cures him, there is no inner struggle for faith in Cathedral Folk at all. Leskov seems afraid of attempting the deeper and more poignant theme, the collision between doubt and faith within the mind of a man of both intelligence and integrity.
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Even as a purely external confrontation of forces, the conflict between atheism and faith in Cathedral Folic is mostly debased and reduced to absurdity, its intellectual content trivialized. Axilla's war with the schoolteacher Varnava Prepotenskij over a human skeleton forms the main "plot" of the early part of the novel. Prepotenskij wants to use the skeleton for "atheistic" anatomical demonstrations to his students, while Axilla considers its non-burial sacrilegious. As Leskov presents it, this " w a r " consists essentially of the puerile pranks of naughty adolescents. Yet in essence this is the war of the century — the great battle of science and religion, probably the most momentous intellectual conflict of modern times — here reduced to the level of a provincial anecdote. And even in this anecdote, Leskov's attitude is ambiguous. With his jejune obstinacy in defending his skeleton and his sophomoric and malicious insistence on waving it like a red flag in the face of t h a t sleepy provincial town, Prepotenskij is certainly both tactless and silly; but on the other hand, neither Leskov nor his readers could hardly commend or admire the superstitious ignorance and bullying of Axilla. Equally anecdotal and trivial are the "devastating questions" p u t to poor Father Zaxarija Benefaktov by a mischievous schoolboy at Prepotenskij's prompting, e.g., Since whales are known to have very small gullets, how could Jonah have been swallowed by one ? The response of this sweet and gentle old priest is equally unlikely to gain our sympathy. Unable to deal with the question intellectually at all, he denounces the boy to his father for insubordination, and the father duly whips his errant son. However time-honored it may be, particularly in Russia, the whip as the answer to an intellectual argument hardly resolves the conflict in favor of Christianity. An apparently more formidable enemy of the Church than the juvenile Prepotenskij is the Petersburg atheist and ex-revolutionary Termosesov, the chief villain of the novel. This moral monster, who lacks convictions of any kind, religious, anti-religious, political or otherwise, determines to turn to his own advantage Father Tuberozov's conflicts with the authorities. Although he himself has some sort of revolutionary past, he denounces Tuberozov to the authorities as a seditionist, hoping thereby to gain himself a lucrative position in the secret police. He even succeeds in this, but his greed eventually proves his undoing: he is caught counterfeiting banknotes. (This motif of the police counterfeiter was to be picked
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up much later in Chekhov's " I n the Ravine".) He undertakes the seduction of the naive nihilist matron Bizjuxina solely in order better to manipulate her in his nefarious machinations; and he controls his unfortunate colleague, Prince Bornovolokov, by means of blackmail and intimidation. As these details indicate — and there are many more — Termosesov is a ridiculously overdrawn and completely unconvincing figure, one of Leskov's super-black devils utterly lacking in human semblance. Like some of the characters in At Daggers Drawn, he is supposed to illustrate Leskov' ; latter-day theory t h a t by the end of the sixties the erstwhile nihilists of the beginning of the decade had cast aside their ideological fig-leaves and become out-and-out criminals. Like Termosesov, they were no longer revolutionaries, but simply scoundrels, blackmailers, and thieves. Whatever the validity of this theory, partly inspired by the Necaev affair and its most important literary repercussion, Dostoevsky's Devils, Leskov's Termosesov is merely a comic-strip villain who nearly wrecks the novel by his presence. The Termosesov sections of Cathedral Folk are as bad as anything in At Daggers Drawn, and they certainly give the Me to the absurd myth t h a t Cathedral Folk is a tranquil, art-focussed, and apolitical book, free from the tendentious axe-grinding of the anti-nihilist novels. 15 On the contrary, crude anti-nihilism remains the Achilles heel of Cathedral Folk. In any case, a bandit is simply a bandit, and cannot be taken seriously as an ideological opponent of the Church or of anything else. Perhaps a more serious threat to the Church than the avowed atheism of the radicals was the widespread religious indifferentism of the upper classes generally; and, since the administrative apparatus of the government was staffed with members of this class, the de facto indifference to the Church of the civil authorities, whatever the official rhetoric in Petersburg. Tuberozov — andLeskov with him, since he does nothing to correct the impression—tends to externalize this problem as well. H e attributes the officials' coolness toward the Church to the fact t h a t many of them were of Polish or Baltic German origin and hence hostile to Orthodoxy as Catholics or Lutherans, not to the widespread indifference toward the Church of the Russian educated classes themselves. Thus the 16
Thomas A. Eekman is eloquent on this point. See "The Genesis of Leskov's Soborjane", California Slavic Studies I I (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1963), 126.
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crucial nineteenth-century problem of t h e loss of faith b y intellectuals or a t least their withdrawal f r o m active association with t h e Church is evaded b y Leskov and a paranoid, xenophobic m y t h substituted. I n Leskov's novel, for t h e purpose of substantiating this myth, the administrative apparatus of this ultra-Russian province is represented as nightmarishly un-Russian, filled with sneering Poles a n d haughty Germans contemptuous of Russia, her Church, and her people. I t was more comfortable to blame the troubles of Orthodoxy on t h e non-Orthodox minorities t h a n to confront t h e fact t h a t most educated Russians h a d ceased to have any b u t vague and casual contacts with t h e Church. Since t h e authorities are indifferentists, or worse still, Catholics or Lutherans, it is no wonder t h a t Tuberozov's denunciations of atheists are met with indifference or ridicule. (It is worth noting t h a t Tuberozov has no compunctions about using against atheists this weapon, the secret denunciation or donos, which he had scorned to employ against the Old Believers.) "They are all like t h a t " , Tuberozov is told when he complains about the schoolteacher Prepotenskij. "If we discharge him, the next will be still worse." The "foreign" state bureaucracy is thus shown to be a most unreliable defender of t h e state Church. Likewise, except for t h e antique Marfa Andreevna Plodomasova, who dies in 1850, the local gentry, though unimpeachably Russian in blood, have little interest in Church affairs, let alone willingness to fight t h e bureaucracy on its behalf. Like most social institutions, the Church depended for leadership, a n d for moral and economic support, on t h e educated classes generally, a n d on the state apparatus in particular. Y e t both these groups, as Leskov shows them, regarded the Church with either indifference or hostility, a t best as an anodyne necessary to the u n t u t o r e d masses. I t was not a hopeful situation. Finally, even at the very top of the social pyramid there was little support to be found, little comfort for t h e Church. Much to F a t h e r Tuberozov's discouragement, a Church-supported temperance campaign is successfully halted by the Minister of Finance, who needs t h e vodka revenues to balance his budget. Rubles weigh heavier t h a n souls. For an initiative of t h e Holy Synod to be thus overruled b y the Minister of Finance, t h e assent of t h e Emperor would obviously be required. Though he naturally cannot say so directly, Leskov leads us to the inescapable conclusion t h a t t h e Orthodox Tsar himself did n o t r a t e Orthodoxy very high on his scale of values.
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Thus from the lay public there was little enthusiasm for the Church or impetus for its renovation. And the situation inside the Church, as Leskov and Father Tuberozov saw it, was even more disheartening. Throughout the Church's structure, from bottom to top, there were disastrous weaknesses at every point. The village pop, supposed to be a source of moral and spiritual enlightenment for his peasant flock, was first of all so badly educated t h a t he had little light to shed, and secondly so poor t h a t he was not only overwhelmed by the most pressing material cares, b u t constantly tempted to squeeze his parishioners to the utmost on those occasions, such as baptisms, weddings, and funerals, when they could not dispense with his services. In the peasants' eyes, he thus became another of the many parasitic exploiters robbing them of their substance, and much of the priest's potential moral influence was consequently lost. At the same time, he was surrounded, on the one hand, by the indifference or contempt of the officials and the gentry and, on the other, subjected to an extremely harsh, centralized ecclesiastical bureaucracy in which bribery and corruption were rife. Finally, between this village priest and his bishop there was an enormous social gulf. The bishops, always chosen from the celibate monastic ("black") clergy, not from the married priests, were wont to rule their domains like mitred autocrats, with little spirit of Christian humility or even humanity. This theme of the tyranny and pomposity of the bishops is only touched on in Cathedral Folk, left smouldering to flare up seven years later in Trifles from the Life of Archbishops (1879). The core of Father Tuberozov's struggle, and his ultimate podvig, his feat of saintly courage and martyrdom, is directed not so much against the Church's external enemies, dangerous as these were, as against this internal rottenness in the Church, this stagnant spirit of timidity, time-serving, and mindless subservience to authority. Tuberozov's reforming zeal comes in two bursts. The first occurs at the beginning of his ministry, when as a vigorous and idealistic young priest he had felt strong and brave enough to challenge the system, to try to lift his Church out of the mire. As we have seen, the system ultimately proves far stronger than Tuberozov's idealism, and his efforts to halt the official persecutions of Old Believers eventually trail off in frustration and defeat. Similarly and symbolically, his most substantial intellectual undertaking, a long memorandum entitled "On the Condition of the Orthodox Clergy and on
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Means of Improving the Same for the Good of the Church and the State", which after months of toil he duly submits, with beating heart, to his ecclesiastical superiors, has absolutely no reverberation whatever. There is neither reproof nor commendation — nothing. The treatise into which Savelij had poured his intelligence and his love is simply buried in some bureaucratic file and forgotten. Many years later, after a lifetime filled with many compromises and accommodations to the system, Tuberozov in his old age rises up once more to do battle as a Christian soldier. He has undergone a kind of transfiguration. Once, while travelling, he takes shelter in the woods during a violent rainstorm and is only a few yards away when a giant oak tree is struck by lightning and felled. This storm scene, incidentally, is described by Leskov with great power and beauty. Tuberozov is not hurt, but the lightning seems to have struck his soul. As he puts it, his life is over and his vita begins ("2izn' uze konSilas'; teper' naSinaetsja 'zitie'."). On the next day, which is a solemn state festival — probably the Tsar's birthday — Tuberozov summons all the officials of the town, on pain of denunciation, to appear in church. Before them he delivers a blistering sermon, incredibly bold for a Russian priest, on the text "Give the king thy judgments, O God, and thy righteousness unto the king's son" (Psalm 72). The word "king" appears as "tsar" in both Slavonic and Russian Bibles, and the direct application to Russian conditions is immediately apparent.16 The gist of the sermon is the prayer that God should hold the Tsar's heart in His hands and protect it, since the Tsar is surrounded by corrupt and un-Christian servants, money-changers who should be driven from the Temple; it ends with the plea that God should not let his holy Russia become a laughing-stock among nations because of the wickedness of its false servants. Under Russian conditions, for a priest to pass such harsh moral judgments, based on religious premises, on the secular authorities seemed the utmost in subversion. As Termosesov exclaims with delight, it is rebellion, bunt. All of a sudden an abyss opens: the Church, far from being a prop to the state and the throne, might become the most powerful revolutionary organization imaginable. Not only did its network cover the nation, but its mythology lived 71 : 1 in the Orthodox numbering. In Russian, "Boze ! daruj carju Tvoj sud i synu earja Tvoju pravdu".
16
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in the hearts of the people as no political ideology ever did. The sermon falls like a bombshell among the Old Town officialdom, and on the third day Tuberozov is arrested and led off to ecclesiastical confinement. For months and months he and his wife live in sequestration. His friends pull every wire they can, b u t the authorities are adamant. Finally it is arranged t h a t if Tuberozov will only go to the Governor and apologize, there will be no further consequences of his seditious act, and he will be released. B u t this Savelij will not do: he exhibits the same stubbornness once displayed by Leskov's father in a somewhat similar situation. 17 The poor protopopica, Savelij's wife, dies, in Babylonian captivity, as it were, and it looks as if Savelij will do the same. B u t at last his friends devise a legaJistically satisfying, if morally dubious formula which is acceptable both to Tuberozov and to the authorities. If he is ordered to acknowledge his guilt, he will obediently do so, since he will bear no moral responsibility for what he does under orders I Thus Savelij pens the required apology and is at last released, allowed to go home to die. Most of Leskov's contemporaries, especially those of the conservative, pro-Orthodox camp to which he then belonged, were seduced by the goodness and attractiveness of Tuberozov and his colleagues. They acclaimed Cathedral Folk as the long-awaited artistic embodiment of the preeminent virtues of Orthodoxy over other versions of Christianity, quite disregarding the tremendous bleakness and pessimism of the picture Leskov had drawn of t h a t church and its problems. As one of Leskov's archepiscopal correspondents p u t it, with characteristic defensive xenophobia, "The two priestly types, Father Savelij and Father Zaxarija, and also the protopopica, are so fine and so morally elevated t h a t with them our clergy can take its stand before any enlightened public . . . Compared with the Catholic clergy, even Axilla is a righteous man and a moral personality." 18 At least one of Leskov's correspondents, however, was more discerning. He noticed, and complained to Leskov about it, t h a t all 17
The elder Leskov lost his post in the civil service for refusing to make the governor of the province an apology he felt he did not owe. 18 Letter to Leskov from Paul, Bishop of Kisinev (Petr Lebedev), of September 25, 1872, quoted from notes made by Prof. Pierre Kovalevsky in the early 1930's and later kindly made available to me. The letter is now in the Central'nyj Gosudarstvennyj Arxiv Literatury in Moscow. See V. G.
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three good clerics are dead at the end of the novel. There is no smena, no successors for them (at least none developed at any length), no new generation of courageous and idealistic young priests to show Orthodoxy the "way out" of its difficulties. Nor was there even a prophetic glimpse into the brighter and better future surely awaiting the much reviled Holy Church. Leskov's reply, part of which has already been quoted ("I am not an enemy of the Church, but her friend"), is a fascinating document, both as an expression of his rather forlorn and unconvincing hopes for the future of Orthodoxy, and as a statement of his principles of "realism", i.e., of faithfulness to the reality he actually knew: As for t h e lack of good people t o replace Tuberozov, Zaxarija, Axilla, and Nikolaj Afanasevifi, there is nothing t o be done about it; and no m a t t e r how m u c h I would like t o g r a t i f y your respected love for good people, I cannot find t h e m in t h e clergy of t h e Russian Church a t t h e present turning point. The types I have depicted are conservative types; b u t w h a t t h e present Church will produce in its progress, t h a t I do not know and a m afraid of making mistakes . . . A chronicle like Dwellers in God's House m u s t be strictly faithful t o t h e t r u t h of t h e day; and I a m indignant a t you, m y most noble mentor. I wish t o leave m a t t e r s with t h e s t a t e m e n t t h a t t h e " h o u r of general renewal has struck for t h e priest's house of Old Town". [This is a slightly altered, " m e m o r y " version of t h e last sentence of Cathedral Folk]. B u t w h a t sort of renewal of t h e Church this will be with D m i t r i j Tolstoy tied to t h e cross around its neck, t h a t m y artistic instinct does not venture t o predict t o me, and by making such a demand of me, you, I think, are committing t h e sin of constricting t h e freedom of artistic feeling. 19
In the political in-fighting of the late 1860's, Leskov himself had sometimes committed the same sin, constricting the freedom of his own artistic sensibility and wandering rather far from the "truth of the day", in order, as he thought, to promote the good cause and destroy his enemies. As to the subject of religion, on which he felt and thought more deeply, if with less superficial passion, than about
Zimina, " I z arxiva N. S. Leskov ", Zapiski otdela rukopisej Gosudarstvennoj Ordena Lenina Biblioteki SSSR imeni V. I. Lenina, vypusk 30 (Moscow, 1968), 209; and William B. Edgerton, "Missing Letters t o Leskov: An Unsolved Puzzle", Slavic Review 1 (March, 1966), 128. 19 Letter t o P. K . S6ebal'skij of J u n e 8, 1871 (X, 328-329). Count Dmitrij Tolstoj, with whom Leskov later crossed swords m a n y times, in 1871 simultaneously occupied t h e posts of Minister of Education and Ober-Procuror of t h e Holy Synod. H e was regarded as an extreme reactionary.
148
H U G H MCLEAN
politics, Leskov refused to be swayed by the propagandists needs of his party. I n Cathedral Folk Leskov still had to strike some final blows on his old political anvil, clanging away once more at the diabolical nihilist rascals. Concerning religion and the Church, however, he told the t r u t h as he saw it; and the artistic t r u t h has a way of remaining clean and alive when the party truths of all ages have settled into the dust of the past. University
of California,
Berkeley
THE PROBLEM OF CONTEXT A N D SUBTEXT I N T H E POETRY OF OSIP MANDEL'STAM KIRIL TARANOVSKY
On Oct. 22, 1920, Blok wrote in his diary: TB03flb Beiepa — H . MaHflejibuiTaiw, KOTOPHH npHexan, no6bmaB BO BpaHreJICBCKOH TiopbMe. OH oMeHb Bbipoc. CHa^ajia HCBWHOCHMO cjiymaTb oSmeryMHjieBCKoe 3aBbiBaHHe. nocTeneHHo npHBbiKaeuib... BHACH apTHCT. Ero CTHXH B03HHKai0T H3 CHOB — oieHb CBoeo6pa3Hux, jTe>KamHx B o6jiacrax HCKyccTBa TOJIbKO.
I t is not completely clear whether Blok's last sentence means that the main concern of Mandelstam's poetry is art itself, or that art is the main source of his inspiration. Whatever Blok may have meant, both assumptions are true. $1 riojiynHJi 6jia>KeHHoe HacjieacTBo — y y v c i i x neeifoe
6Aywcdawu}ue
a m ;
CBoe poflCTBO h cKyiHoe coceflCTBo Mbi npe3HpaTb 3aBefl0M0 BOJibHbi. H He OflHO COKpOBHme, CblTb MOJKeT, MHHya BHyKOB, K npaBHynaM yfifleT, H CHOBa CKajibA lyMcyw necHio CJTOJKHT H KaK ceow
ee npoiraHeceT. 1
These lines were written by Mandelstam as early as 1914. In June, 1932, the same idea is repeated as Batjuskov's advice to his fellowpoet: MTO >K, noflHHMaii ynHBJieHHwe CpoBH, TH, ropojKaHHH H flpyr ropo>KaH, — Bewue
cmi,
Kan o6pa3HHKH KPOBH,
nepejiHBaij H3 CTaKaHa B CTaKaH.
The idea of pouring eternal dreams from one glass to another is further developed in the poem " K nemeckoj reci", written two months later: "Ja ne slyxal rasskazov Ossiana." The italics in all quotations are mine [K. T.].
1
150
KIRIL
TARANOVSKY
1y>Ka$I peMb MHC 6y.neT OSOJIOTKOH, H MHoro npe>Kfle, MeM n CMCJI pcwrrbcfl, H dyneou 6UA, Obi A euHoepadmU cmpocou. R KHueou 6biA, Komopan eaju cnumca.
The image of the grape line finds its explanation in the poem dedicated to Batjuskov. I t is a metaphor for the genuine freshness of poetry: H OTBeian MHC onjiaKaBuiHH Tacca: — H K BCJlHHaHHHbHM eme He npHBblK;
TojibKO cmuxoe eunozpadnoe MHCO MHC OCBOKHJIO cjiynaiiHO JI3HK.
I t should be noted t h a t the metaphor of the grape as poetry was already hinted at in "Grifelnaja oda" (1923), Mandelstam's most complicated poem about the creative poetic process: "Plod naryval. Zrel vinograd." 2 The idea of preexistence of poetry (. . . prezde 6em ja smel roditsja . . . ja knigoj b y l . . .) is expressed on a more abstract level in one of his famous vos'mistiSija (1934). "Lips" in this poem are, undoubtedly, the "poetic lips" (a favorite image in Mandelstam's poetry), and the whispering which was born before the lips is poetry itself: H LUySepT Ha Bo.se, H MoijapT B NNRABEM raMe, H rgTe, CBHIIJ ymnii Ha BbioineHCH Tpone, H TaMJieT, MbicuHBiuHH nyrjiHBbiMH rnaraMH, CnHTajiH nyjibc TOJinbi H BepHJiH TOJine. BbiTb MoweT, npe>Kfle ry6 ymt pojm-ncn rnenoT H B SeaflpeBecHOCTH Kpy>KHJIHCH JIHCTH, H Te, KOMy mh nocB«maeM onbiT, JJ,o onbiTa npHoSpejiH Heprw.3 2
This is a good example of a later context explaining an earlier metaphor. In the first four lines of the poem music is unified with poetry, as it were, and thus the aim of art in a more general sense is clearly stated: it must follow the mood and aspirations of the people. Such artists as Schubert, Mozart, and Goethe followed this principle in their creative work. In regard to Mandelstam's own poetry, this idea is expressed with the greatest power in a fragment written in 1931: 3
H Cojibiue He peSeHOK. T H , MorHJia, ropCaToro — MOJTMH! H eoeopw 3a ecex c TaKoio CHJIOH, WTO6 He6o CTajio He6oM, MTO6H ry6bi
He ciweii yqnTb
floTpecKajiHCb, KaK p030Baa rjiHHa.
THE POETRY OF OSIP MANDEL'STAM
151
Poetry existed even before humanity became aware of it, — Mandelstam believes. But there were no poets: there were only joyful presentiments: no33Hji — m i y r , B3pbiBawmnH Bp cm» TaK, hto rjiy6nHHbie cjioh BpeMeHH, e r o qepH03eM oKa3biBaioTCH CBepxy. H o ObmaioT TaKHe anoxn, Korfla MejiOBeiecTBo, He flOBOJibCTByHCb ceroflHfliiiHHM flHeM, TOCKyji no rjiySHHHbiM cjiohm BpeMeHH, KaK
naxapb, >Ka>KffeT ijejiHHbi BpeMeH . . . MacTO npHxoflHTCH CJibimaTb: s t o xoporno, h o s t o BiepamHHH fleHb. A h roBopio:
BiepauiHHH fleHb eme He poahjich. Ero eme He Swjio no-HaaroHmeMy. H xoiy CHosa O b h « h h , nyuiKHHa, K a T y j u i a , h MeHH He yAOBjieTBopjuoT hctophhcckhh Obhahh, nyuiKHH, KaTyjui. y«HBHTejlbHO, B CaMOM flejie, MTO BCe B03HTCH C nOSTaMH H HHKaK c hhmh He
pa3BHMKeHCTBOBaHHii; HMnepaTHB 3ByiHT b hhx HanwflHee. Hosto cbohctbo bchkoh no33HH, nocKOJibKy OHa KJiaccHHHa. OHa BOcnpHHHMaeTCH KaK to, hto aoji>kho SbiTb, a He KaK t o , hto y » e 6biJio. HTaK, h h OflHoro nosTa eme He GbiJio. Mbi CBoSoflHbi o t r p y 3 a BocnoMHHaHHH. 3aT0 CKOJibKO
peflKOCTHwx
npefliyBCTBHii:
nyuiKHH,
O b h a h h , roiwep.
Kor/ja
jiio6obhhk b THuiHHe nyTaeTCH b He>KHbix HMeHax h B,«pyr BcnoMHHaeT, hto s t o y w e Cbuio: h cjioBa h bojiocm, h neTyx, kotopmh npOKpHsaji 3a okhom, K p m a j i y » e b OBHflneBbix t p h c t h h x ,
rjiyCoKaa panocTb noTBopeHbfl oxBaTbiBaeT ero,
rojiOBOKpy>KHTejibHaii pa^ocTb: Cjiobho TeMHyio BO«y, h nbio noMyraBuiHiicii B03flyx, B p e s w BcnaxaHo njiyroM, h p03a 3eMJieio S u j i a . T a K h noaT He 6ohtch noBTopeHHH h jierKo n w w e e T KJiaccmeCKHM bhhom. ( " C j i o b o h K y j i b T y p a " , 1921)
The Old Testament and the Apocalypse, Homer and Sappho, Ovid and Tibullus, Dante and Tasso, Racine and Balzac, Dickens Cf. also: "Narodu nuzen stix tainstvenno-rodnoj /Ctob ot nego on vefino prosypalsja" ( " J a nynCe v pautine Svetovoj", 1937). One might ponder Mandelstam's mentioning Hamlet among great artists. B y the image of "frightened steps" Mandelstam describes Hamlet's behavior as man; he presumably considers him also a poet. N o t the poem which he (Hamlet) attempted to write, but all his monologues are thus to be considered high poetry. The fact, however, that they were written by Shakespeare leaves Hamlet in the company of Schubert, Mozart and Goethe — as a metonym for Shakespeare.
152
KLRIL TABANOVSKY
and Edgar Allan Poe, Derzavin, Batjuskov, Pushkin, Jazykov, TjutSev, Lermontov, Fet, Blok, Andrej Belyj, VjaSeslav Ivanov, Gumilev, Axmatova — these are only some of the sources reflected in Man dels tarn's poetry, either as obvious reminiscences or as enciphered subtexts. Needless to say, such reminiscences and even direct quotations acquire a new quality in his work. Mandel'stam was not an imitator. This quality of Mandelstam's poetry was noted by Benedikt LivSic as early as 1919 (i. e. after Kamen' but before Tristia): H e HOBbix CJIOB nmeT no3T, HO HOBbix CTOPOH B cuoBe, flaHHOM KaK HeKan 3aBepmeHHaH peanbHOCTb — KaKOH-TO HOBOB, nocejie He 3aMeHenHoii HaMH rpaHH, KaK0r0-T0 peSpa, KOTOpbiM CJIOBO eme He 6HJIO K HaM 06pameH0. BOT noieMy He TojibKo «crapbiMH» cnoBaMH opyRyeT noaT: B CTHxax MaHflejibiuTaMa MM BCTpeiaeM ijejiwe CTPOKH H3 «pyrnx n03T0B; H STO He flocaflnafl cjiyHafiHOCTb, He 6ecco3HaTejibHoe 3aHMCTB0BaHHe, HO CBoeo6pa3HHH npiieM noaTa, nono>KHBuiero ce6e i . . .
The problem is more complicated in the first stanza of the poem "10 janvarja 1934", written immediately after the death of Andrej Belyj: MeHH npecjieayioT Ase-Tpn cjiynaHHwx pa3H — Becb «eHb TBep>Ky: nem/ib MOH jtcupna, O E o w e , KaK nepHbi h CHHerjia3w CmpeKOm CMepmu, kok MHypb tepna.
I n this case, a new poetic reminiscence is projected, as it were, over the Pushkinian pattern. I t comes from Slovo o polku Igoreve: "PeKHTb BO BpeiweHH, TFLE HET HH B O J i K a , HH T a i m p a ,
A He6o SysymHM CepeMeHHo, IluieHUtfeu
Cbimozo
atfiupa.
In my Harvard seminar on MandeKtam (spring 1968) all the participants were puzzled by this image. The verb govorjat indicated that it was a quotation. In June of the same year, during my visit to Moscow, I asked Mandelstam's widow, Nadezda Jakovlevna, whether she knew the source. Her answer was: "He just wrote it, I a m also tempted to compare the image of dragonflies in one of Mandeltam's earliest poems, "Medlitelnee sneznyj u l e j " (1910), with Belyj's S " Z i m a " (1907): H , e c j i H e Aedanbix CTpyHTCa
ajiMa
BeHHOCTH
3,aecb — TpeneTaHne
3ax
M0P03, cmpeK03
BbicTpo>KHBymHx, CHHerjia3bix. (MaHflejrbLUTaM) N Y C T B 3A c T e H o i o , B AWMKC 6 j i e K . n o H ,
Cyxofl, cyxoii, cyxoK Mopo3, — Becejibiii poii Ha CTeKJia AAMO3HUX, 6nemymHx cmpeK03. CJICTHT
(Bejiwii) In both poems dragonflies appear in a cheerful description of winter In Mandelstam, the dragonflies are a metaphor for a turquoise-blue veil (birjuzovaja vual); in Belyj, they serve as a metaphor for snowflakes. 12 "Slovo i kultura" was published in the almanac Drakon (1921). When Mandelstam reprinted the essay in his book O poezii (1928), the sentence quoted above was changed: "Kto shazal, dto priCina revoljucii — golod v mezduplanetnyx p r o s t r a n s t v a x ? " This is obviously a rhetorical question: Mandelstam knew the answer. 13 This poem was published for the first time in the almanac Let (1923) a s a part of the cycle which included two other poems dealing with the theme of aviation: "Veter nam utesen'e prines" (1922) and " K a k telce malen'koe krylyskom" (1923).
156
KIRIL TARANOVSKY
and I was always angry with him" ("Eto on prosto tak napisal, i ja vsegda na nego serdilas' "). However, Mandelstam wrote nothing prosto tak. Recently, the subtext has been found by one of the participants of my seminar, Mr. Omry Ronen. The image comes from the mystical philosophy of G. I. Gurdziev (Gurdjieff), who believed that organic life on the Earth fed the Moon and other celestial bodies, that wars and revolutions were results of planetary influences, particularly — that they were provoked by the hunger of the Moon.14
14
Gurdziev used t o promulgate his teaching in circles of his followers in Moscow and Petrograd (1915-1917), and in t h e Caucasus (Essentuki, Sochi, Tiflis, 1917-1919). I n 1919 he even opened t h e Institute for H a r m o n i o u s Development of Man in Tiflis. I n J u n e , 1920, he left Georgia for Constantinople "with a fairly large c o m p a n y " . Mandel'stam could have heard a b o u t Gurdziev's teaching either in Moscow or in Petrograd, b u t most p r o b a b l y in Tiflis, where he spent t h e summer and fall of 1920. Gurdziev's cosmology was described b y P . D. Uspenskij (Ouspensky) in his book In Search of the Miraculous (N. Y., 1949). Uspenskij quotes t h e following statement m a d e b y Guriiev a t t h e beginning of World W a r I (p. 24): " W h a t is w a r ? It is the result of planetary influences. Somewhere u p there two or three planets h a v e approached too near t o each other; tension results . . . For t h e m it lasts, perhaps, a second or two. B u t here, on t h e earth, people begin t o slaughter one another, and t h e y go on slaughtering m a y b e for Several years . . . They fail t o realize t o w h a t a n extent t h e y are mere pawns in t h e game. They t h i n k t h e y signify something; t h e y t h i n k t h e y can move about as t h e y like; t h e y t h i n k t h e y can decide t o do this or t h a t . B u t in reality all their movements, all their actions, are t h e result of p l a n e t a r y influences. And t h e y themselves signify literally nothing. Then t h e m o o n plays a big p a r t in this. B u t we will speak about t h e moon separately". The role of t h e Moon is explained on p. 57: "The evolution of large masses of h u m a n i t y is opposed t o nature's purposes. The evolution of certain small percentage m a y be in accord with n a t u r e ' s purposes . . . There exist, therefore, special forces (of a p l a n e t a r y character) which oppose t h e evolution of large masses of h u m a n i t y a n d keep it a t t h e level it ought t o be. F o r instance, t h e evolution of h u m a n i t y beyond a certain point, or, t o speak more correctly, above a certain percentage, would be f a t a l for t h e moon. The moon a t present feeds on organic life, on h u m a n i t y . H u m a n i t y is a p a r t of organic life; this means t h a t h u m a n i t y is food for t h e moon. If all m e n were t o become too intelligent t h e y would not w a n t t o be eaten b y t h e m o o n . " (See also p. 139.) This "cosmic conflict", according t o GurdSiev, can be solved b y t h e evolution of organic life (p. 305): "Organic life . . . h a s t o evolve, to a d a p t itself t o t h e needs of t h e planets and t h e earth. Likewise also t h e moon can be satisfied a t one period with t h e food which is given her b y organic life of a certain quality, b u t afterward t h e time comes when
THE POETRY OF OSIP MANDEL'STAM
157
Mandelstam liked to dream about the happy life of humanity, its "golden age", past or future. In 1919, during the height of the civil war, he turned himself to Hesiod's myth of "holy islands". 15 I n the early twenties, facing the threat of a new intervention by Western allies, Mandelstam transformed Gurdziev's fantastic cosmology into a new poetic myth. All poets have their favorite themes, their favorite images, and even their favorite words. All these recurrent themes and images form inner cycles in the work of a given poet, cycles which very often cannot be placed within exact chronological limits. Moreover, such recurrent themes and images may be characteristic of several poets, often independent of both the so-called poetic schools and even of historical periods. For example, many Russian poets of the 20th century were fascinated by the image of the ship, including such different poets as Blok, Gumilev, Majakovskij, Mandelstam, and B. Livsic. An autobiographic image of crucifixion is common to many 20th century Russian poets (Belyj, Brjusov, Blok, Xlebnikov, Majakovskij, Esenin, Pasternak, and others). There are hundreds of Russian poems written in trochaic pentameter which deal with a dynamic theme of the road and a static theme of life. All these poems form a "Lermontovian cycle", as I have called it, which begins with Lermontov's "Vyxozu odin ja na dorogu" and leads to Blok's "Vyxozu ja v put otkrytyj vzoram", to Majakovskij's "procyganennyj romans" ("Malcik sel v zakat glaza ustavja"), or to Pasternak's "Gamlet" ("Gul zatix. J a vysel na podmostki"). 16 Needless to say, we receive more poetic information when we p u t a poem in a broader context and reveal its links with other texts. she ceases to be satisfied with the food, cannot grow on it, and begins to get hungry. Organic life must be able to satisfy this hunger, otherwise it does not fulfill its function, does not answer its purpose. This means that in order to answer its purpose organic life must evolve and stand on the level of the needs of the planets, the earth and the moon." — MandeRtam's psenica sytogo efira might be compared also to Esenin's lunnyj xleb and to his image of cosmic satiation and happiness: "Zakin' ego [mir, gar] v nebo, /Postav' na stolpy!/ Tam lunnogo xleba/ Zlatjatsja snopy. //Tam golod i zazda/ V kornjaxnepojut./No zreet odnazdnyj/ Svet angelskix jurt." ("Otcar' ",1917). 15 See my article "Pcely i osy v poezii Mandel'stama", To Honor Roman Jakobson I I I (The Hague, 1967), 1985-87. 16 See my paper "O vzaimootnosenii stixotvornogo ritma i tematiki", American Contributions to the Fifth International Congress of Slavists I (The Hague, 1963).
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KIRIL TARANOVSKY
At this point I shall analyze Mandel'stam's poem "Koncert na vokzale" (1921) in terms of context and subtext in order to show how this concept works. However, before doing so, I might ask a question: what would Mandelstam himself think about such a method? The answer to this question can be found in his article "BarsuS'ja nora" and in his essay "Razgovor o Dante": YcTaHOBjieHHe jiHTepaTypHoro reHe3nca noaTa, ero jiHTepaTypHbix HCTOHHHKOB, ero p o f l C T B a H nponcxo>KfleHHH cpa3y BMBO^HT Hac Ha TBepflyio noHBy. H a Bonpoc, HTO XOTEJR CKA3ATB nosT, KPHTHK MOWCT H He OTBeTHTb, HO Ha B o n p o c ,
owyfla OH npmiieji, oTBenaTb o S j r a a H . . . «Eapcyibji Hopa», 1922
KoHeq ^eTBepToi} necHH «Inferno» — Hacroflma» uHraman oprun. H Haxowy 3«ecb MHCTyio H SecnpHiwecHyio /;eMOHCTpaqHK) ynoMHHaTejibHoii KJiaBHaTypu Rama. KJiaBHuiHan n p o r y n K a no BceMy Kpyro3opy aHTHHHOCTH. KaKoM-To moneHOBCKHH n0Ji0He3, rj\e PHAOM BbiCTynaioT BOOpyHteHHbift L(e3apb c KpoBaBuMH raa33MH rpH51BIIIHH MaTepHK) Ha aTOMbl. Lfumama He ecmb eunucKa. Lfumama ecmb ifutcada. HeyMOjacaeMocmb eu ceoucmeenm. BqenHBiiiHCb B B03flyx, OHa e r o He OTnycKaer. «Pa3roBop o flame», 1933
Mandelstam was not a poet of large forms; he did not write long poems or novels. But, as a matter of fact, his entire creative work is one entity, one large form: his unique poetic vision of the world, or — in more modern terms — the genuine poetic model of the world, created by him. Many themes and images occur both in his poetry and in his prose. This is the case with his poem "Koncert na vokzale". A realistic description of concerts held in Pavlovsk's railroad station may be found in Bum vremeni, in the chapter "Muzyka v Pavlovske" (first publication in 1925): B
cepeflHHe NEBHHOCTBIX ro,noB
B
IlaBjioBCK, KaK B
HCKHH 3JIH3HH,
CTpeMWiCH
EECB I l e T e p S y p r . CBHCTKH n a p 0 B 0 3 0 B H HKHBIE 3BOHKH MEMANHCB c
naTpHOTH^ecKOH KaKO(J)OHHEH yBepnopwflBeHaflqaTororoaa, H ocoSeHHbiii 3anax CTOJM B orpOMHOM B0K3ajie, r^e qapnuH MaftKOBCKHH H PyCHHiuTeHH. CwpOBaTHii B03flyx 3anjiecHeBeBiuHX napKOB, 3anax THHIOIUHX napHHKOB H opaH>KepeHHbix po3 H HaBCTpeny eMy —TOwejibieHcnapeHHH 6y4>eTa, e^Kaa CHrapa, BoraajibHaH rapb H KOCMeTHKa MHoroTbicaHHofi TOJinw. However, in the poem a particular concert is described. The iron world of the station is enchanted, and the music which the poet hears acquires a symbolic meaning. Hejlb3fl flbllliaTb, H TBepflb KHIUHT H HH oflHa 3Be3fla He roBopHT,
qepBiiMH,
THE POETRY OF OSIP Ho,
BHflHT B o r ,
ecTb My3biKa H a a
MANDEL'STAM
159
HaMH,
/IpCOKHT B0K3ajI OT neHbJ! aOHHfl, H CHOBa, nap0B03HbIMH CBHCTKaMH Pa30pBaHHbIH, CKpHnHMHblti B03flyx CJIHT. OrpoMHbiii napK. BoK3ajia map CTeKJiflHHbiH. MHp onjiTb 3aaopo>KeH. Ha 3ByiHbifi imp b 3JiH3HyM TyMaHHbiii TopwecTBeHHo yH0CHTCH BaroH. naBJIHHHH KpHK H pOKOT (JlOpTenbHHIIblH — H ono3«aji. MHe CTpaumo. 3to coh. >Kejre3Hbiii
M n Bxomy b CTeKUHHHbift jiec B0K3ana, C K p H n H t J H H H CTpoft B C M H T e H b H H B HoHHoro
x o p a «mcoe
CJie3aX.
Hanajio,
H 3anax po3 b rHHiomnx napHHKax, Ffle no« CTeKJiHHHbiw HC6OM HoneBajia PoflHaa TCHb b KOMyromHX TOJinax. H mhhtch MHe: Becb b My3uKe h neHe >Kene3HUH MHp TaK HHmeHCKH APTOKHT, B cTeKJiHHHbie H ynnpaiocb ceHH; Ky«a we tm? Ha TpH3He mhjioh tchh B nocjieAHHH pa3 HaM My3biKa 3ByiHT.17
Already the first impersonal sentence, "Nel'zja dysai", is significant for the general mood of the poem. The theme of air and breathing was very prominent in Mandelstam's poetry in general. I t is noteworthy t h a t beginning in the early twenties the images of dense and unclear air and difficulty in breathing predominate. This theme is so complex t h a t it should require a separate study. However, even a few quotations will be sufficient to illustrate its complexity: JJbixame eeiyee
B c r a x a x MOHX
>KHBOTBopHmero HX « y x a .
(1909?) H a CTeKJia b c j h o c t h
Moe dbixamie,
ywe
jierjio
Moe Tenjio.
(«flaHO MHe Tejio», 1909) 17
In Sobranie socinenij I (2nd ed.; 1967), the last Stanza has the same number of lines (6) as the first three. The fourth line of the last Stanza reads as follows: "GorjaSij par zra5ki smyfikov slepit". I am not convinced that Mandelstam really intended to restore this line. Personally I prefer the five-line version. See also the note on pp. 462-463, where this addition is explained and where the reminiscences from Lermontov and Tjutcev are indicated.
160
KIRIL
TARANOVSKY
K veMy dbiuiamb? H a >KecTKHx
ksmhhx
njifliueT
EojibHoft yuaB, cBHBajicb h KJiyöacb. («OceHHH cyiwpaK», 1912) OTpaBjieH xjieß h eo3dyx
mnum,
K a K TpyflHO paHbi BpaseBaTb! HochiJ», npoflaHHbiß b ErnneT, H e Mor CHJibHee TocKOBaTbJ (1913) H CKOJibKO eo3dyxa h uiejiKa H BeTpa b uiënoTe TBoeiw . . . ( « T ß o e nynecHoe np0H3H0ineHbe», 1917)
Cjiobho TeMHyK) Bofly
h nbw noMymuemuücH
(«Cecrpbi —
eo3dyx . . .
TH>KecTb h HejKHOCTb», 1920)
Henb3H flwmaTb, H TBepflb KHIIIHT nepBHMH . . . («KoHijepT Ha B0K3ajie», 1921) npHnoÄHHTb, KaK dymtmû. CTor,
MTO manKOÜ tomht . . .
Bo3dyx,
( « H He 3Haio, c K3KHX nop», 1922) dbiuiaA 3Be3fl mjicthoh KojiTyHOM npocTpaHCTBa H
Tpyxoií, duuiaji...
( « H no neceHKe npncTaBHOiU, 1922) B030yX flpOJKHT OT cpaBHeHHH . . . Bo3dyx
ôueaem
meMHbiM,
KaK Bo^a, h Bce >KHBoe b neM njiaBaeT KaK
pbi6a . . . Bo3dyx 3aMemaH t 3 k >Ke rycTO, KaK 3eMjm, —
Hero
H3
nejib3ji
bwììth,
a
b Hero Tpy«HO boîîth.
X p y n K o e jreTOHCMHCneHHe Haine« spbi noflxoflHT k KOHLty. («HamefluiHÎi noflKOBy»,
KpeMHfl h
eo3dyxa
1923)
jj3mk,
C npocjiOHKOH TbMbi, c npocjiOHKoii CBeTa. (KHTb.
( « K o j i i o t pecHHijbi», 1931) MHe A
c Ka>KflbiM flHeM dbiuiamb ece manceAee,
MejKAy TeM
HenbOT
noBpeMeHHTb
—
THE POETRY OF OSEP MANDEL'§TAM
161
H poHCfleHu fljiH Hacjra>KfleHbH CeroM JlHiub cepflue lejioBeKa h koha. («CeroflHH MO>KHO . . . » , 1931) J1k»6JIIO noaBJieHHe TKaHH, Kor^a nocjie flByx hjih Tpex, A to MeTbipex 3adbixanuu npudem ebinpxMumejibHuu 63dox. («BoCbMHCTHUIHH», I —II, 1933) TaK, iToSbi yMepeTb Ha caMOM nene, TbiCMMy pa3 Ha AHW jiHmycb oGhhhoh Ceo6odu e3doxa h co3Hanwi qejin. 18 (,qeKa6pb 1933) A qepe3 eo3dyx cyMpawo-XMnnamuu HeHa^aTOH ctchu MepemaTCH 3y6uu . . . («Eokht BOJiHa», 1935) O, 3tot MeAJreHHbiH, odbiWAuebtu npocmop — H hm npecbiiqeH no 0TKa3a! — M omdbimaeuiuucH pacnaxHyT Kpyro3op — noBfl3Ky 6bi Ha o6a rjia3a. (1937) H o6pamajiCH K eo3dyxy CAyae, JKflaji ot Hero ycjiyrn hjih Becra H coSHpajrcji b nyTb, h njiaBaji no s y r e HeHaHHHaiomHxcj! nyTemecTBHH. («He cpaBHHBaii», 1937) Hapody Hymen CBeT h eo3dyx aojvydou, H Hy>KeH xjie6 h CHer 3jib6pyca. («H HbiHie b nayraHe CBeTOBoft», 1937) H b fiMy,
b 6opo,iiaBHaTyK) TeMb,
CKOJibwy K o6jie.neHe.noH BOflOKanKe, H, 3aduxaficb, Mepmeuu eo3dyx CM, H pa3JieTai0TCH rpann b r o p f l w e . («Kyfla MHe aeTbCH», 1937) 18
I n Sobranie socinenij (Vol. I, 2nd ed.) these t h r e e lines a r e published as t h e second p a r t of a six-line p o e m (No. 287, d a t e d December, 1933). H o w e v e r , t h i s is n o t a n original p o e m b y M a n d e l s t a m , b u t a v a r i a n t of lines 9 - 1 4 of his translation of t h e 164th sonnet b y P e t r a r c h , published in t h e same edition as No. 489 (dated December, 1933, — J a n u a r y , 1934). I n t h e f u l l t e x t of t h e sonnet t h e end is d i f f e r e n t : ThiCOTy pa3 Ha ahio, ce6e Ha «hbo, HflOJi>KeHyMepeTb Ha caMOM «ejie — H BocKpecaio TaK >Ke CBepxo6bWHo. T h e later version is closer t o t h e original.
162
K I R I L TARANOVSKY H a M C0K)3H0 JIHUIb TO LITO H 3 6 W T 0 1 H 0 ,
BnepeflH He npoBan, a npoMep, H SopoTbCH 3a eo3dyx npootcumowbiu — 3TO cuaBa jipyrHM HE B npHiwep. («CTHXH o HeH3BecTH0M cojiflaTe», 1937) A rpy«b CTecHaeTCH, 6e3 jrawKa n i x a , y>Ke He ft now — noem me dbixanbe.
necHb oflHorjia3aji, pacTyman H3 Mxa,
OflHorojiocbiH flap oxoTHHHbero 6brra, KoTopyio noioT BepxoM H Ha Bepxax, JJepxca dbixanbe eojibhto u ornKpumo.
(«now,
Korfla
ropTaHb Cbipa»,
1937)
MTO >K MHe riofl ronoBy flpyroii necoK noflJio>KeH? njieqHCToe flOBOJDKbe Hjib 9TOT POBHMH Kpaii — BOT Bee MOH npaBa, — H nojiHoii rpyflbio HX eduxamb etye H do/wcen. («Pa3pbiBu Kpyrjibix 6yxT», 1937)
Tbi — ropjiOBOH ypajr,
ECJIH 6 MeHH J1H1UHJIH Bcero B MHpe Tlpaea dutuamb H OTKPBMATB FLBEPN H y reep>KflaTb, HTO 6birae S y f l e t . . .
—
H He CMOJiMy . . . («ECJIH 6 MEHFL HAUIN B p a r n B3HJIH», 1 9 3 7 )
And finally, only one quotation from Mandelstam's prose: Bee np0H3BefleHHH MnpoBoii jmTepaTypu H /jejiio Ha pa3pemeHHbie H HanHcaHHbie 6e3 pa3pemeHHH. nepBbie — STO Mpa3b, BTopbie — eopoeammii eo3dyx. («MeTBepTaH npcraa», 1930—1931) I believe t h a t these quotations speak for themselves. The image of the unfriendly sky was familiar to Mandetetarn's early poetry. . . . He>KHBoro He60CB0fla Bcerfla CMeiomHHCH xpycTajibl («CycanbHbiM 30JIOTOM r o p j m , 1908) BH>Ky KaMeHHoe He6o Ha« TycKJiofi nayTHHoii BO«. 51
H noHHMato 3TOT ywac H nocTHraro 3Ty CBH3b: Hefio naflaeT, He pymacb, H Mope njremeT, He neHHCb.
H
(1909?)
THE POETRY OF OSIP MANDEL'§TAM
163
H BHMcy Mecnu, 6e3AbixaHHbiH H HeSo MepTBeHHeii xojiCTa («Cjiyx qyTKHH napyc HanpHraeT»,1910) TBepAt, yMOKJia, yMepjia . . . («CKyflHbift jiyq xojioahoh Mepoio», 1911) HeSo TyCKJioe c otctbctom CTpaHHbiM — MHpoBaa TyMaHHan 6 o j i b . . . («Bo3flyx nacMypHbiii BjiaweH h ryjioK», 1911) 0 HeSo, He5o, t h mhc Cyfleuib CHHTbCfl! He MoweT SbiTb, i t o S tm cobccm ocjienjio . . . (1911)
But never had his sky been as hostile and frightening as it was in "Koncert na vokzale". In the first line of this poem, the image of the sky19 swarming
19
There is n o d o u b t in m y m i n d t h a t t h e word tverd in " K o n c e r t n a vokz a l e " m e a n s 'sky', ' f i r m a m e n t ' . T h e entire i m a g e of t h e f i r s t s t a n z a is ascensional, as it were: f i r s t t h e suffocating a t m o s p h e r e ( " n e l z j a ^ d y s a t " ) , t h e n t h e blackness of t h e s k y s w a r m i n g w i t h worms, t h e n t h e stars, a n d f i n a l l y — t h e m u s i c which is above us. I n R u s s i a n poetic usage, t h e word tverd p r i m a r i l y refers t o t h e sky. W h e n i t m e a n s ' e a r t h ' , ' t e r r a f i r m a ' , it is usually used in c o m b i n a t i o n w i t h s k y ( " n e b o i tverd'") or i t is modified b y t h e a d j e c t i v e zemnaja. M a n d e l s t a m used t h i s n o u n seven t i m e s in his p o e t r y , b u t never in t h e sense of ' e a r t h ' . I n f i v e instances i t m e a n s t h e a c t u a l s k y : (1) Teepdb yiwonKJia, yMepna. C KOJIOKOJIbHH OTyiHaHeHHOH KTO-TO CHflJI KOJIOKOJia. («Ckyahmh jiyq xojioahoh Mepoio», 1911) (2)
ToubKO TaM, r « e meepdb
ceemm,
HepHO-jKejiTbift jiocKyT 3JIHTCH. («.EjBopiWBaH ruiomaAM, (3)
Hejib3fl flbimaTb
H meepdb
Kurnum
1917)
tepenMU
(«KoHqepT Ha Boraajie», 1921) (4)
YMblBajICH HOHbK) Ha flBOpe — Teepdb
CUHAO epydbtMU
3SE3DAMU...
(1921) (5)
nofl BbicoKyio pyKy SepeT rioSexcdeHHyio
meepdb
A3pau/i.
(«BeTep HaM yTeuieHbe npHHec», 1922)
There is a striking similarity between examples (3) a n d (4). B o t h were w r i t t e n in t h e same y e a r , a n d in b o t h a n u n f r i e n d l y s k y is depicted.
164
KIRIL TARANOVSKY
with worms may have been suggested by David Burljuk's poem "Mertvoe nebo" (published in the almanac Doxlaja luna, 1913): «He6o Tpyn! He 6ojibiue! 3Be3Abi — tepeu — nbjiHbie TyMaHOM YCMHPHK) Sojib m e - j i e c T O M O6M3HOM HeGo — CMpaflHbiii Tpyn!!20 One could dislike this poem, and I would not blame anybody for it. One may well recall the lines by A x m a t o v a : Kor,na 6 BM 3HANH, H3 Kanoro copa PacTyT CTHXH, HE Be^an CTbifla! I f Mandelstam actually took the image of worms from Burljuk, this fact may be interesting, on the one hand, because it contributes to our understanding of his creative process and, on the other hand, as an evidence of his exquisite memory, but such a subtext does not afford a deeper comprehension of his poem. The second line of the poem contains an overt poetic polemic with Lermontov's lines: HoHb raxa. nycTbiHH bhcmjict Eory, H 3BC3fla C 3Be3flOK) TOBOpHT. B HeCecax TopwecTBeHHo H My^Ho . . . I n Mandelstam, a strong sensation of an impending cataclysm is sharply opposed to Lermontov's sense of cosmic harmony. Mandelstam will return to the image of Lermontovian cosmos in "Grifelnaja o d a " (1923):
To the best of my understanding, in the remaining two instances tverd also means 'sky': the sky painted on a porcelain plate (stekljannaja tvertj in "Na blednogoluboj emali", 1909), or on the wall (stenobitnaja tverd in "Tajnaja veierja", 1937). 20 There is a difference, however, between Mandelstam's and Burljuk's sky. In Mandelstam, the black visible firmament is full of worms; in Burljuk the worms are the stars themselves. An inquisitive reader may ask whether Burljuk's poem does not already contain a hidden polemic with Lermontov's "Vyxozu odin ja na dorogu", Is it not the Lermontovian mist in the second line of "Mertvoe nebo" (which, incidentally, is a trochaic pentameter) ? Even if Burljuk did not have Lermontov in mind, could not Mandelstam understand his poem as a polemic with Lermontov and drive the point home ? See my article "Tri zametki o poezii Mandelstama", IJSLP X I I (1969), 165-166.
THE POETRY OF OSIP MANDEL'§TAM
165
3Be3«a c 3Be3flOH MoryiHii cthk,
KpeMHHCTbifl nyTb H3 CTapoii necHH . . . and in "Stixi o neizvestnom soldate" (1937): Hay™ MeHH, nacToiKa xmiafl, Pa3yMHBinaHCH JieTaTb,
Kan MHe c SToft
e03dyutH0u MOZUAOW
Ee3 pyAH u kpum coBJiaftaTb.
H 3a JlepMOHTOBa Mnxanjia H OT^aM TefJe CTporaii oTieT, KaK cyTynoro ynHT MorHJia H 603dyuiHaa RMO BueqeT.
This is again a polemic with Lermontov. VozduSnaja jama, with an obviously negative shade of meaning, is opposed to Lermontov's vozduSnyj okean : Ha eo3dytumM OKeane Be3 pyAH u 6e3 eempuA
njiaBaioT b TyMaHe Xopbl CTpOHHbie CBCTHJI.
Thxo
Lermontov's voice is heard in "Koncert na vokzale" once more, in the last stanza. Mandelstam's lines: H MHumca MHe:
Becb b My3biKe h neHe
Mejie3tmii Mup TaK hhiuchckh «po>kht . . .
may be compared with those by Lermontov: H CHUACH MHe CHfllOIUHH OI"HiJMH Beiepnuu
nup b poflHMoii CTopoHe . . .
This is a clear case of borrowing po ritmu i zvucaniju (in Sergej Bobrov's terms).21 Nevertheless, we may ask the question: why did this borrowing occur? The probable answer is that the theme of death (and dreaming of death: "Mne strasno. fito son") is present both in the prophetic "Son" and in the apocalyptic "Koncert na vokzale". There is, indeed, an apocalyptic mood in the image of a sky that swarms with worms, where all the stars are silent. There is also an apocalyptic purport in the pointed conclusion of the poem: Kyda uce mu ? Ha TpH3He mhjioh tchh B nocAednuii pa3 MM My3UKa 3eynum.
S. Bobrov, "Zaimstvovanija i vlijanija", Pecat i revoljucija V I I I (1922), 72-92.
11
166
KIRIL TABANOVSKY
This conclusion echoes the fifth and the sixth line of the following poem by TjutKeHbe,
OSpjIfl HX CTporHH, Ba>KHbIH h npocroft — Chx rojibix CTeH, ceii xpaMHHbi nycToft noHflTHO MHe BbicoKoe yneHbe. He eudume M> ? CoSpaBiuHCfl b aopory, B nocAedHUti. pa3 eaM eepa npedcmoum :22
Eiqe oHa He nepeuijia nopory, HoflOMee y>K nycT h toji ctoht, —
Eme OHa He nepeuuia nopory, Eme 3a Heft He 3aTBopnjiacb ^Bepb... Ho Mac HacTaji, npo6HJi... MoJiHTecb Bory, B noc/iedHuu pa3 eti MOMimecb menepb.
The mood here is apocalyptic, just as it is in Mandelstam's poem. 23 Against the background of this subtext, the music in "Koncert na vokzale" acquires a higher meaning: it becomes a kind of religious rite. The theme of death and music appears in Mandelstam's poetry as early as 1912 in the poem "Pesexod". Here, as in "Koncert n a vokzale", the poet is frightened by "mysterious heights", listening to the sound of a snow-ball which is on its way to becoming an avalanche, and will destroy him (and probably not only him). H e is aware t h a t music cannot rescue him from the abyss, despite the fact t h a t his whole soul is "in the bells": fleiiCTBHTejibHO, jiaBHHa ecTb b ropax! H bch moh pywa — b K0Ji0K0Jiax,
Ho My3MKa ot 6e3flHbi He cnace-r!
The last line of the poem may suggest a polemic with Skrjabin's belief t h a t the power of music can save humanity. 24 11 Mandelstam's conclusion of "Koncert na vokzale" repeats even the rhythmo-syntactic pattern of these lines (and zvuc.it rhymes with predstoit). 23 One m a y further compare TjutCev's "golye steny" and "pustaja xramina" with Mandelstam's "vokzala sar stekljannyj", "zeleznyj mir", and "stekljannyj les vokzala": the concert, like the Lutheran service, is held in austere surroundings. 24 ". . . dlja Skrjabina xarakterno to, cto Iskupitelem, kotoryj prineset s soboj novoe nebo i novuju zemlju, budet muzykant, artist, a ne moralnyj propovednik, priiem imenno xudoznik prineset miru vseobs6uju garmoniju — ljubov' i spravedlivosi"(I. I. Lapsin, Zavetnye dumy Skrjabina [Petrograd 1922], 23).
THE
POETRY
OF
OSIP
MANDEL'§TAM
167
There is one puzzling image in the last stanza of "Koncert na vokzale": trizna miloj teni, which should be explained. One can guess that the poet is mourning a Russia which is gone forever, and primarily her cultural past. The reader who recalls another of Tjutcev's poems, "Dusa moja — filizium tenej", will be assured that his guess is correct. It should be recalled that the image of Elysium appears both in Mandelstam's prosaic description of the concert and in the poem. .IJyrna MOH — 3jiH3HyM TeHeii, TeHeii 6e3M0JiBHbix, CBeTJiwx h npeKpacHbix, H H noMbiCJiaiw r o f l H H b i S y f t H o t t c e K ,
HH pafloCTOM, HH r o p i o He npHnacTHbix. flyma MOH, 3jiH3HyM TeHeii, MTO o S m e r o MEW >KH3Hbio H TOCOIO ! Me>K BaMH,
H ceii
npmpaicu MUHyernux, jiywiux dneu,
6ecHyBCTBeHH0ii Tojinoio ? . .
1 believe that the first subtext by Lermontov and both subtexts by T j u t i e v contribute to a better understanding of the very message of MandeKtam's poem.25 They are important, and their function is entirely different from that of Burljuk's subtext, which may be ignored. A remarkable note has been found among Mandelstam's papers. It deals with the idea of reading one poet and hearing the voice of another. 2 M a n 3 1 r . MTeHbe H e K p a c o B a . « B j i a c » H «>KHJI Ha CBeTe p b i m a p b 6eflHbiH». H e K p a c o B TOBOPHT,
eiwy
BHFLEHHE
B e e MepemHjiocb B 6pe«y:
BHfleji CBeTa npecTaBJieHHe, Bnfleji rpeuiHHKOB B a « y .
25 There may be third subtext by TjutCev in "Koncert na vokzale", the image of the dear shadow (milaja ten') possibly coming from the last stanza of Tjutiev's poem "Ona sidela na polu":
CTOHJT H MOJina B C T o p o H e H
n a c T b TOTOB 6HJI H a KOJICHH,
—
H C T p a u i H O r p y c T H O C T a j i o MHe,
Kan om npucyufeu
MUAOU
menu.
168
KIRIL TARANOVSKY
n y III K H H OH HMeJi oflHO BH«eHbe, He^ocTynHoe yiwy, H rjiy60K0 BneiaTJieHbe B cepjme Bpe3ajiocb eMy. «C toh nopbi» — h «ajibuie KaK 6h cjimiuhtch BTopoft noTaeHHuft rojioc: Lumen coelum, Sancta R o s a . . . Ta w e Ke TeMa oto3B3hhh h noflBHra.
If we define the context as a set of texts which contain the same or a similar image, the subtext may be defined as an already existing text (or texts) reflected in a new one. There are four kinds of subtexts: (1) that which serves as a simple impulse for the creation of an image; (2) zaimstvovanie po ritmu i zvucaniju (borrowing of a rhythmic figure and the sounds contained therein); (3) the text which supports or reveals the poetic message of a later text; (4) the text which is treated polemically by the poet. The first two do not necessarily contribute to our better understanding of a given poem. However, (2) may be combined with (3) and/or (4), and (3) and (4) may, in their turn, be blended. It is self-evident that the concept of context and subtext may overlap in cases of self-quotations and autoreminiscences. This happens often in Mandelstam's poetry. For example, in the poem "Cto pojut casy-kuzne5ik" (1917) there is an image of a sinking boat: . . . 3y6aMH Mbimii TonaT }KH3HH TOHGHbKOeflHO. . . ... jiacrowa H flowa26 OTEH3ajia MOH iejiHOK... H o «lepeiwyxa ycjibiuiHT
M na due
MOPCKOM:
npocmu.
. . . CMCpTb HCBHHHa . . .
This bidding farewell to life and its simple beauty 27 is repeated in the poem "Telefon" (1918): 26
I.e., Iasto6ka-dooka. In Russian minds, the unpretentious, fragrant bloom of ieremuxa (the so-called "European bird-cherry" is associated with the beauty and poetry of everyday life. Cf. m y article "Razbor odnogo 'zaumnogo' stixotvorenija Mandelstama", Russian Literature 2 (1972), 132 — 151; about the image of 27
6eremuxa see particularly pp. 147 — 149.
THE POETRY OF OSIP MANDEL'STAM
169
B bmcokom CTporoM Ka6HHeTe CaMoy6nMi(bi 3bohok —
—
TejieKHJiHCb cijiepbi:
CaM0y6HflcTB0 pemeHo Mojimh, npoKJWTaji uinaTyjiKa! Ha due mpcKOM qeemem:
npocmu!
For a person who does not know the first poem the image may be surprising, even enigmatic.